| Literature DB >> 36011144 |
Chang Chuan Melvin Lee1,2,3,4, Zhi Yuen Beh5,6, Chong Boon Lua3, Kailing Peng3, Shahridan Mohd Fathil7,8, Jin-De Hou9,10, Jui-An Lin4,8,10,11,12,13,14,15.
Abstract
Objective. Clavicle fractures are common injuries potentially associated with significant perioperative pain. However, this region's complex sensory innervation poses a challenge for regional anesthetic or analgesic (RA) techniques. We conducted this scoping review to summarize the current literature, particularly with regards to motor-sparing techniques. Methods. A scoping review was carried out in accordance with the Joanna Briggs Institute's framework. All articles describing the use of RA for clavicle fractures or surgery were included. PubMed®, Ovid MEDLINE®, EMBASE®, Scopus®, CINAHL®, and the Cochrane database were searched without language restrictions. Results. Database searches identified 845 articles, 44 of which were included in this review, with a combined patient total of 3161. We included all peer-reviewed publications containing clinical data and summarized the findings. Conclusions. Current evidence of RA techniques in clavicle surgery is heterogeneous, with different approaches used to overcome the overlapping sensory innervation. The literature largely comprises case reports/series, with several randomized controlled trials. Intermediate cervical plexus block is the regional technique of choice for clavicle surgery, and can provide reliable surgical anesthesia when combined with an interscalene block. Cervical plexus block can provide motor-sparing analgesia following clavicle surgery. Promising alternatives include the clavipectoral block, which is a novel motor-sparing regional technique. Further studies are required to determine the efficacy and safety of various techniques.Entities:
Keywords: analgesia; anesthesia; bone; clavicle; fractures; motor activity:motor-sparing; nerve block; pain; postoperative
Year: 2022 PMID: 36011144 PMCID: PMC9408139 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare10081487
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
Inclusion and exclusion criteria for eligibility.
| Criteria |
|---|
| Inclusion |
| Any published primary prospective or retrospective studies, case reports, case series, conference abstracts |
| Exclusion |
| Studies on non-human subjects |
| Cadaveric studies |
| Studies not reporting clinical data or patient outcome (e.g., editorials or technical descriptions) |
| Overlapping participant data |
| Retracted articles |
A summary of randomized controlled and observational studies included in this scoping review [6,7,8,13,21,23,24,25,35,36,37,43,44,45,48,53].
| Reference (Year), Country | Study Design | Sample Size | Fracture Location | Type of Block | Needle Guidance | LA Type and Volume | Anesthetic Technique | Perioperative Analgesia Regime | Outcome(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Retrospective observational | 50 (25 + 25) | Midshaft and distal | GA and surgical site infiltration vs. GA alone | LM | 30 mL of injectate comprising of 300 mg ropivacaine, 5 mg morphine sulphate, 1 mg adrenaline, and 20 mL 0.9% sodium chloride (total volume 61.5 mL) | GA | IV Fentanyl and ketorolac PCA for 24 h, paracetamol, tramadol, pregabalin |
Significant ↓ pain scores and Tramadol requirement up to 24 h with surgical site infiltration. Infiltration ↓ DHEA-S levels at 72 h ( |
| [ | Prospective observational | 12 | NR | SCPB and ISB | US | 1% mepivacaine or 0.75% ropivacaine, median volume 20 mL (range 16 to 40 mL) | Sedation or awake | Paracetamol, |
Sedation required in 2 cases. Mean VAS 2 (range 0 to 3) on day 0 and 1. |
| [ | RCT | 60 | NR | SCPB and ISB vs. GA alone | US | SCPB: 5 mL 2% lignocaine with adrenaline and 5 mL 0.5% bupivacaine | Awake vs. GA | Fentanyl, paracetamol, tramadol |
SCPB + ISB ↓ post-operative pain scores, time spent in recovery, and postoperative opioid requirement vs. GA alone. SCPB + ISB ↑ interval to first occurrence of pain (324.7 min) vs. GA. |
| [ | RCT | 40 | Midshaft | ICPB and ISB vs. CPB and ISB | US | ICPB: 5 mL 0.375% ropivacaine | Awake | NR |
No difference in pain scores in recovery. No block failures. Residual motor block in 8 of 20 (40.0%) patients from the ICPB + ISB group at 4 h post-block. ICPB + ISB ↓ in FVC, FEV1, PEFR, and hemi-diaphragmatic excursion in compared to ICPB + CPB. |
| [ | RCT | 70 | NR | SCPB vs. SCPB and ISB | US | SCPB: 10 mL 0.25% bupivacaine | GA | Fentanyl *, paracetamol, morphine |
SCPB alone significantly ↓ the incidence of phrenic nerve palsy (22.9% vs. 2.9%, No difference in intraoperative or post-operative pain scores, or analgesic/anaesthetic requirement. No difference in the incidence of perioperative complications or patient satisfaction. Horner’s syndrome (5.7% vs. 2.9%). |
| [ | Randomised, double-blind RCT | 50 | 26 Midshaft | SCPB and ISB vs. ICPB and ISB | US | SCPB or ICPB: 10 mL 0.5% bupivacaine | Sedation | Tramadol |
100% block success with ICP and ISB vs. 5 patients (20%) with block failure in SCPB + ISB group. Faster onset and ↑ duration of analgesia (540 vs. 342 min) with ICPB + ISB vs. SCPB + ISB. |
| [ | Prospective case-control | 126 | 95 Midshaft | ISB with GA vs. GA alone | US | ISB: 20 mL 0.5% bupivacaine | GA | Sufentanil *, morphine, paracetamol, oxycodone |
Patients with ISB had ↓ pain scores in recovery (mean difference 1.7 points) and significantly ↓ analgesic requirement (mean difference 8.3 mg). Patients with ISB also had ↓ intraoperative Sufentanil requirements. ISB ↓ post-operative nausea and vomiting (4% vs. 17%) vs. GA alone (not statistically significant) |
| [ | Retrospective observational | 110 | 90 Midshaft | SCPB and ISB vs. ISB with GA | LM | SCPB: 10 mL 0.5% bupivacaine | Awake vs. GA | No standardized analgesia regimen |
No conversion from block group to GA. SCPB + ISB ↓ intraoperative Fentanyl (141 µg vs. 207 µg, |
| [ | Retrospective observational | 2300 (346 + 1954) | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | Regional anesthesia use is associated with ↑ odds (1.70, |
| [ | RCT | 60 | NR | ISB alone vs. ISB and SCPB | NR | SCPB: 0.5 mg.kg−1 bupivacaine with 1 mg·kg−1 lignocaine to ≥10 mL | Sedation | Fentanyl * |
ISB-only group required ↑ supplementary LA at the medial end (16.7% vs. none) and had ↑ conversion to GA (10.0% vs. 3.3%) Hoarseness of voice: 36.7% of the entire cohort. |
| [ | Retrospective | 16 | 1 Medial | SCPB and ISB | US | SCPB: 5 mL 2% lignocaine and 5 mL 0.5% bupivacaine | Mixed | NR |
All patients with lateral fractures underwent surgery awake. 1 patient required GA, and 4 patients required sedation. Mean duration of motor block and analgesia 213 and 259 min respectively. |
| [ | Randomised prospective comparative study | 60 | NR | SCPB and ISB vs. SCPB and SpC | US | SCPB: 10 mL 0.25% bupivacaine | Sedation | Fentanyl, paracetamol |
2 cases from the SCPB + ISB group and 3 cases from the SCPB + SpC group required conversion to GA. No difference in duration of motor block: SCPB + ISB group vs. SCPB + SpC group (347 min vs. 392 min, No difference in Horner’s syndrome (7.3% vs. 1.8%) or hoarseness of voice (7.3% vs. 3.6%). |
| [ | Prospective observational | 7 | NR | SCPB | US | 8–14 mL 0.25–0.5% bupivacaine with adrenaline | Not applicable | NR |
Emergency department study for analgesia provision, with a subset of 7 patients with clavicle fractures. Mean ↓ in pain scores by 6.29 points or 73.5%. Out of the entire cohort of 27 patients, 1 patient developed hemidiaphragmatic paresis, and another developed hoarseness. |
| [ | Retrospective observational | 12 | NR | SCPB and ISB | US | SCPB: 0.25 mL·kg−1 0.5% bupivacaine | Sedation | Tramadol | One patient felt mild pain at the start of surgery, and another patient required deeper sedation during manipulation of the clavicle. |
| [ | Prospective | 30 | NR | SCPB and ISB | Unclear, possibly US | SCPB: 10 mL 0.25% bupivacaine | Sedation | NR |
Mean duration of analgesia 277 min. Incidence of Horner’s syndrome (26.7%), and hoarseness of voice (16.7%). |
| [ | Randomised controlled trial | 60 | NR | SCPB and ISB (nerve stimulator vs. ultrasound guided) | LM | SCPB: 0.5% lignocaine | Sedation | NR | Ultrasound guidance ↓ conversion to GA vs. nerve stimulation ( |
Abbreviations are as follows: ICPB, intermediate cervical plexus block; ISB, interscalene brachial plexus block; CPB, clavipectoral plane block; RCT, randomized controlled trial; LA, local anesthetic; IV, intravenous; PCA, patient controlled analgesia; FVC, forced vital capacity; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 s; PEFR, peak expiratory flow rate; NR, not reported; SCPB, superficial cervical plexus block; SpC, supraclavicular brachial plexus block; WALANT, wide-awake local anesthesia no tourniquet; DCP, deep cervical plexus; SpN, supraclavicular nerve; GA, general anesthesia; NB, nerve block; ACJ, acromioclavicular joint; PECS, pectoralis nerve; VAS, visual analogue scale; NRS, numerical rating scale; POD, postoperative day; DHEA-S, dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate.
Figure 1A PRISMA (preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses) flow diagram for studies included and excluded from the present review.
Reclassification of cervical plexus blocks into superficial, intermediate, and deep based on a standardized nomenclature system [7,8,13,15,21,23,25,28,32,33,34,36,37,38,39,42,43,45,46,47,48,49,50,51,52,53,59,60].
| Reference (Year), Country | Block Description | Needle Guidance | Original Description | Block Site (Needle Tip Position)/Description from Cited Literature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Superficial cervical plexus | ||||
| [ | In-text | LM | Superficial | Subcutaneous infiltration along the posterior border of the SCM. |
| [ | In-text | US | Superficial | Just beneath the skin, at the midpoint of the line joining the mastoid and clavicle. |
| [ | In-text | LM | Superficial | Subcutaneous infiltration along the posterior border of the SCM. |
| [ | In-text, image | US | Superficial | Scan plane along the long axis of the SCM. Hydrodissection along the superficial cervical plexus plane. Sonographic image provided, demonstrating LA deposition above the posterior border of the SCM. |
| Intermediate cervical plexus | ||||
| [ | In-text | US | Intermediate | Along the posterior border of SCM, into the interfascial space between the SCM and the prevertebral fascia |
| [ | In-text | US | Superficial | Just superficial to the prevertebral fascia. |
| [ | In-text | US | Superficial vs. Intermediate | Study comparing SCPB vs. ICPB. SCPB consisted of subcutaneous infiltration along the posterior border of the SCM, while ICPB consisted of local anesthetic deposited after piercing the investing layer of cervical fascia. |
| [ | In-text | US | Superficial | Needle inserted lateral to medial through the thyroid cartilage with the needle tip tracked under and positioned in the fascia deep to the SCM. |
| [ | In-text | US | Superficial | Local anesthetic deposited under the posterolateral belly of the SCM; sonographic image provided. |
| [ | In-text | US | Superficial | Infiltration at the posterior border of the SCM but superficial to the prevertebral fascia. |
| [ | In-text | US | Superficial | Injection along the fascial plane separating the posterior border of the SCM and anterior scalene muscle. |
| [ | In-text, image | US | Superficial | The needle is visualized in position just deep to the lateral border of the SCM with injectate seen tracking along the fascial plane. |
| [ | In-text | US | Not specified | Plane block in the prevertebral fascia posterior to the SCM. Needle advanced along the posterior border of the SCM to the nerve point of the neck. |
| [ | In-text, image | US | Superficial and intermediate | Both SCPB and ICPB was performed. Injection performed just beneath the skin at the lateral border of the SCM. Additionally, for the second case, injectate was deposited at the superficial cervical plexus (indicated on the provided image to be superficial to the prevertebral fascia and anterior and middle scalene muscles, and deep to the SCM). |
| [ | In-text | US | Superficial | Beneath the posterior border of the SCM, above the prevertebral fascia, and avoiding excessive medial spread of the injectate. |
| [ | In-text, image | US | Superficial | Injection between the anterior and middle scalene muscles, in the space posterior to the SCM. |
| [ | In-text, image | US | Superficial | Injectate deposited under the SCM, in the fascial space between the SCM and levator scapulae muscles. |
| [ | In-text | US | Superficial | Needle positioned just under the SCM, at the posterior border around the midpoint between C6 and the mastoid process. |
| [ | In-text | US | Superficial | Injectate deposited deep to the prevertebral fascia between the SCM and anterior scalene muscles *. |
| Deep cervical plexus | ||||
| [ | In-text | US | Superficial | Needle position under the SCM below the prevertebral fascia. |
| [ | In-text | US | Superficial | Needle beneath the prevertebral fascia. |
| Technique not described or in insufficient detail | ||||
| [ | NR | NR | Superficial | Not reported or directly referenced. |
| [ | NR | US | Superficial | Not reported or directly referenced. |
| [ | NR | LM | Superficial | Not reported or directly referenced. |
| [ | NR | US | Superficial | Not reported or directly referenced. |
| [ | NR | NR | Superficial | Not reported or directly referenced. |
| [ | NR | US | Superficial | Not reported or directly referenced. |
| [ | NR | Unclear, possibly US | Superficial | Not reported or directly referenced. |
| [ | NR | NR | Deep and Superficial | Not reported. Superficial component described as a classic approach with reference to a single article †. |
Abbreviations are as follows: US, ultrasound; SCM, sternocleidomastoid; LM, landmark; LA, local anesthetic; SCPB, superficial cervical plexus block; ICPB, intermediate cervical plexus block; NR, not reported. * A series of 10 cases of clavicular fixation performed under interscalene block as the sole anesthetic modality was briefly mentioned in this case report by Vandepitte and colleagues with no further details provided. † Not described in detail in-text. The authors report it as a classic approach, with a single reference to: Adriani J. Blocking of spinal nerves. In: Adriani J, ed. Labat’s Regional anesthesia: techniques and clinical applications. St. Louis: Warren H. Green, 1985:236–54 [60]. This book chapter provides a few different approaches to the cervical plexus, and there is insufficient information to identify the exact technique used.