| Literature DB >> 35167505 |
Rachel Lefebvre1, Landon Cohen, Harrison Ford Kay, Amir Mostofi, Alidad Ghiassi, Milan Stevanovic.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In distal upper extremity surgeries, there can be a choice to use an upper arm or forearm tourniquet. This study examines discomfort and tolerance in healthy volunteers to determine whether one is more comfortable.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35167505 PMCID: PMC8846271 DOI: 10.5435/JAAOSGlobal-D-21-00229
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Acad Orthop Surg Glob Res Rev ISSN: 2474-7661
Figure 1Bar diagram showing that tourniquet tolerance time varied significantly by the anatomic site with forearm tourniquets tolerated by participants for longer (mean 16.1 minutes, range 3.5 to 38.1 min, SD 9.2) than tourniquets on the upper arm (mean of 12.2 min, range: 3.1 to 32.9 min, SD 7.9) (P < 0.0001) (A). In both anatomic sites, similar VAS prompted participants to request tourniquet removal, despite different times of inflation (forearm mean 7.3, SD 1.36; upper mean 7.32, SD 1.19) (P = 0.839) (B). VAS = visual analog scores.
Figure 2Graph showing that the time for paresthesias to completely resolve after tourniquet removal was not significantly different between forearm (mean 8.07; SD 5.07) and upper arm (mean 7.74, SD 4.47) locations (P = 0.675). For both anatomic sites, a regression coefficient of 0.41 is statistically significant (0 < 0.0001), indicating that it takes 0.41 minutes (or approximately 25 seconds) for paresthesia resolution after each minute of tourniquet inflation.