Korean Journal of Anesthesiology (Apr 2020)

Ultrasound-guided percutaneous intercostal cryoanalgesia for multiple weeks of analgesia following mastectomy: a case series

  • Rodney A. Gabriel,
  • John J. Finneran,
  • Matthew W. Swisher,
  • Engy T. Said,
  • Jacklynn F. Sztain,
  • Bahareh Khatibi,
  • Anne M. Wallace,
  • Ava Hosseini,
  • Andrea M. Trescot,
  • Brian M. Ilfeld

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4097/kja.19332
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 73, no. 2
pp. 163 – 168

Abstract

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Background Acute post-mastectomy pain is frequently challenging to adequately treat with local anesthetic-based regional anesthesia techniques due to its relatively long duration measured in multiple weeks. Case We report three cases in which preoperative ultrasound-guided percutaneous intercostal nerve cryoneurolysis was performed to treat pain following mastectomy. Across all postoperative days and all three patients, the mean pain score on the numeric rating scale was 0 for each day. Similarly, no patient required any supplemental opioid analgesics during the entire postoperative period; and, no patient reported insomnia or awakenings due to pain at any time point. This was a significant improvement over historic cohorts. Conclusions Ultrasound-guided percutaneous cryoanalgesia is a potential novel analgesic modality for acute pain management which has a duration that better-matches mastectomy than other currently-described techniques. Appropriately powered randomized, controlled clinical trials are required to demonstrate and quantify both potential benefits and risks.

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