EditorialAcute pain management in the pediatric ambulatory setting: How do we optimize the child's postoperative experience?
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Selected highlights from clinical anesthesia and pain management
2018, Journal of Clinical AnesthesiaCitation Excerpt :Successful ultrasound-guided infraclavicular plexus block in adults has been achieved with as little as 14 mL of lidocaine [129] to as much as 35 mL [130]. The use of ultrasonography to place peripheral nerve blocks has become an integral part of pain management in pediatric anesthesia [131]. In a randomized double-blinded clinical trial, Ince et al. compared bupivacaine 0.5% solution with 2% lidocaine (1:200 K epinephrine) in volumes of either 0.25 mL/kg or 0.5 mL/kg in pediatric patients undergoing emergent or elective arm, forearm, or hand surgeries [132].
Letter to the Editors
2018, Surgery (United States)Use of Opioids and Nonopioid Analgesics to Treat Pediatric Postoperative Pain in the Emergency Department
2022, Pediatric Emergency CarePediatric emergency department visits for uncontrolled pain in postoperative adenotonsillectomy patients
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