Abstract

Introduction: Pneumatic tourniquets are used extensively in orthopedic hand/wrist surgery. Complications, while rare, are associated with elevated pressure and duration of tourniquet use. Limb occlusion pressure (LOP) is the minimum tourniquet pressure at which arterial blood flow is restricted. Therefore, we performed a cross-sectional double-blinded randomized control trial to assess if there is a difference in post-operative pain at the surgical and tourniquet site between LOP and standard tourniquet pressure and if there is a difference in post-operative opioid usage.Methods: A total of 44 patients (Age 60±13, 30 female, 14 male) were randomized into two groups (LOP, 191±14 mmHg | STP, 250 mmHg) of 22 patients controlling for gender (15 female, seven male). The primary outcome was a visual analog scale (VAS) for pain at the tourniquet and surgical sites, recorded for the first two weeks post-operative. Daily pain medication usage was recorded and quantified using oral morphine milligram equivalents (MME). A group-by-time generalized mixed-model ANOVA was used to detect within-group and between group (LOP vs STP) differences in VAS at the surgical and tourniquet sites as well as medication use. Results: LOP significantly decreased post-operative pain medication usage across the first week (-50%; p<0.05). Both groups had similar VAS pain at the surgery site, but the LOP group had 80% reduced pain at the tourniquet site when averaged across the first post-operative week (p<0.05). Conclusions: The use of LOP compared to STP elicits reduced post-operative pain at the tourniquet site and reduces post-operative pain medication use in the first post-operative week.

Highlights

  • Pneumatic tourniquets are used extensively in orthopedic hand/wrist surgery

  • Limb occlusion pressure (LOP) significantly decreased post-operative pain medication usage across the first week (-50%; p

  • The use of LOP compared to standard tourniquet pressures (STP) elicits reduced post-operative pain at the tourniquet site and reduces post-operative pain medication use in the first post-operative week

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Summary

Introduction

Pneumatic tourniquets are used extensively in orthopedic hand/wrist surgery. Complications, while rare, are associated with elevated pressure and duration of tourniquet use. Elevated tourniquet pressures have been associated with increased post-operative pain and increased risk of complications, which can include skin irritation and abrasions, nerve or muscle injury, ischemia, and bruising [4,5]. In rare instances these lead to severe morbidity and mortality secondary to tourniquet use [68]. Establishing LOP requires attaching the photoplethysmography probe to the distalmost aspect of the extremity requiring tourniquet use and running the preset system for LOP measurement, which is a component of modern pneumatic tourniquets Once this data point is established, the tourniquet system will be set to inflate at this pressure. Et al [12] were able to decrease mean cuff pressure from 300 mm Hg to 151 mm Hg using LOP without causing a detrimental effect on the bloodless quality of the operative field in ACL surgery

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