Abstract

We evaluated whether moving the “line of crush” from thigh to the calf before onset of tourniquet-mediated hypertension would prevent or diminish it. We also evaluated any change in pain or functional outcome. Twenty adult patients were recruited and randomly assigned to either control or intervention groups. Inclusion criteria: any willing participant >18 years old with foot and/or ankle pathology requiring an operation lasting >90 minutes. Exclusion criteria included contraindication to general anesthesia, peripheral neuropathy affecting lower limbs of any etiology, or chronic pain requiring regular opiate analgesia. The intervention group received a thigh tourniquet for 60 minutes, after which a calf tourniquet was inflated and the thigh tourniquet was deflated. The control group received only a thigh tourniquet throughout surgery. At 90 minutes, the control group had mean arterial pressure of 86.8 mmHg, compared with the intervention group at 76.3 mmHg (p ≤ .014). At end of surgery, the difference had increased further (control 98.1 mmHg, intervention 78.3 mmHg (p ≤ .001). Moving the line of crush during limb tourniquet application prevents development of the hypertensive response. For cases in which a prolonged tourniquet application is required, a dual-tourniquet technique will prevent intraoperative hypertension and may influence long-term pain and function.

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