| Literature DB >> 19825054 |
A M B Heard1, R J Green, D A Lacquiere, P Sillifant.
Abstract
Acute trismus can be caused by pain, muscle spasm, swelling or mechanical obstruction. Unfortunately, the cause is not always obvious during pre-operative airway assessment. In this pilot study, we prospectively evaluated mandibular nerve block as a pre-operative tool to identify patients with reversible causes of trismus, namely pain or spasm, in order to allow safe anaesthetic induction. Six patients with unilateral fractured mandibles and trismus received a mandibular nerve block before induction of general anaesthesia. There was an increase in maximal inter-incisor gap after the blocks (median (range) distance: pre-block 16.5 (14-30) and post-block 34 (32-35) mm; p = 0.027), and no further improvement after induction of general anaesthesia (post-induction 37 (30-40) mm; p = 0.276 compared with post-block). There was an improvement in pain scores (p = 0.027), and no side-effects were detected. Pre-operative mandibular nerve blockade appears to reverse trismus caused by pain and muscle spasm, allowing the anaesthetist to decide whether awake intubation is genuinely indicated.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19825054 DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2044.2009.06066.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anaesthesia ISSN: 0003-2409 Impact factor: 6.955