Postoperative Tourniquet Pain in Patients Undergoing Foot and Ankle Surgery. 2018

Promil Kukreja, and Eva Lehtonen, and Martim C Pinto, and Harshadkumar A Patel, and Haley M McKissack, and Ashish Shah
Anesthesiology, University of Alabama School of Medicine, Birmingham, USA.

Background  Tourniquets are commonly used to reduce bleeding intraoperatively during orthopedic surgery. There are variable guidelines for ideal tourniquet pressure and duration; the practice of fixed, high tourniquet pressures remains common. The purpose of this study was to assess the correlation between excessive tourniquet pressure and duration and the incidence of tourniquet pain in foot and ankle surgery patients. Methods  A retrospective cohort study was conducted on 128 patients who underwent foot and ankle surgery with tourniquet use. Baseline systolic blood pressure (SBP), tourniquet pressure and duration, intraoperative opioid consumption, post-anesthesia care unit (PACU) pain scores, PACU opioid consumption, and PACU length of stay (LOS) were collected. Linear regression analysis was used to test for the statistical correlation between the tourniquet pressure and duration and postoperative pain scores, narcotic use, and PACU LOS. Results A tourniquet pressure of 280 mmHg was used in 90% of the cases (N = 128). Only 2.5% of the patients had tourniquet pressures 100-150 mmHg above SBP. The mean tourniquet time was 107.5 minutes ± 39.8. Linear regression showed a significant positive correlation between tourniquet time and morphine equivalents used in the perioperative period (r = 0.410; p < 0.001) and the length of PACU stay (r = 0.250; p = 0.012). Conclusion  Prolonged tourniquet times at high pressures, not based on limb occlusion pressure LOP, lead to increased pain and opioid use and prolonged PACU LOS. Basing tourniquet pressures on LOPs could likely improve the safety margin of the tourniquets; however, randomized clinical trials are needed.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries

Related Publications

Promil Kukreja, and Eva Lehtonen, and Martim C Pinto, and Harshadkumar A Patel, and Haley M McKissack, and Ashish Shah
January 2023, Frontiers in surgery,
Promil Kukreja, and Eva Lehtonen, and Martim C Pinto, and Harshadkumar A Patel, and Haley M McKissack, and Ashish Shah
October 2001, Foot & ankle international,
Promil Kukreja, and Eva Lehtonen, and Martim C Pinto, and Harshadkumar A Patel, and Haley M McKissack, and Ashish Shah
November 2008, Foot & ankle international,
Promil Kukreja, and Eva Lehtonen, and Martim C Pinto, and Harshadkumar A Patel, and Haley M McKissack, and Ashish Shah
March 2005, Foot & ankle international,
Promil Kukreja, and Eva Lehtonen, and Martim C Pinto, and Harshadkumar A Patel, and Haley M McKissack, and Ashish Shah
January 1992, Foot & ankle,
Promil Kukreja, and Eva Lehtonen, and Martim C Pinto, and Harshadkumar A Patel, and Haley M McKissack, and Ashish Shah
September 2018, Seminars in nuclear medicine,
Promil Kukreja, and Eva Lehtonen, and Martim C Pinto, and Harshadkumar A Patel, and Haley M McKissack, and Ashish Shah
June 2014, Foot (Edinburgh, Scotland),
Promil Kukreja, and Eva Lehtonen, and Martim C Pinto, and Harshadkumar A Patel, and Haley M McKissack, and Ashish Shah
September 2012, Journal of the Medical Association of Thailand = Chotmaihet thangphaet,
Promil Kukreja, and Eva Lehtonen, and Martim C Pinto, and Harshadkumar A Patel, and Haley M McKissack, and Ashish Shah
April 2012, Foot & ankle specialist,
Promil Kukreja, and Eva Lehtonen, and Martim C Pinto, and Harshadkumar A Patel, and Haley M McKissack, and Ashish Shah
January 1983, Foot & ankle,
Copied contents to your clipboard!