Anaesthetics – Bier block for distal radius fracture.
a. Contraindications
Local anaesthetic allergy.
Peripheral vascular disease or Raynaud disease.
Sickle cell disease.
Local infection or cellulitis.
Uncooperative patient or refusal of consent.
Severe hypertension, unstable epilepsy, significant liver disease, AV fistula/lymph node clearance, inability to obtain IV access, open fracture, or child where inappropriate.
b. Drug and dose
Prilocaine 0.5% at 2.5 mg/kg, approximately 0.5 mL/kg, according to local maximum dose guidance.
c. Steps
Explain the procedure and obtain consent.
Use appropriate monitoring, resuscitation equipment and two trained clinicians where possible.
Confirm correct patient, limb, IV access in the affected limb and absence of contraindications.
Apply double-cuff tourniquet and exsanguinate/elevate the limb.
Inflate proximal cuff to at least 100 mmHg above systolic pressure and confirm loss of distal pulse.
Inject the calculated prilocaine dose slowly via the distal IV cannula.
Monitor for pain and local anaesthetic systemic toxicity.
After anaesthesia develops, move to distal cuff if required for comfort.
Keep the cuff inflated for at least 20 minutes and deflate in a controlled manner while monitoring the patient.
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