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Technical Nuances of Surgical Implantation of Intrathecal Pain Pumps. Susan Garruto MSN,CRNP,RNFA Thomas Jefferson University Hospital. Disclosure. I have no affiliations to disclose. Objectives. Identify patients who would benefit from intrathecal drug delivery
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Technical Nuances of Surgical Implantation of Intrathecal Pain Pumps Susan Garruto MSN,CRNP,RNFA Thomas Jefferson University Hospital
Disclosure • I have no affiliations to disclose
Objectives • Identify patients who would benefit from intrathecal drug delivery • Describe the technique used for catheter/pump implantation • Explain the troubleshooting aspects of catheter/pump implantation
Spasticity (baclofen) Multiple sclerosis Traumatic brain injury Cerebral Palsy Cord injury Paraparasis Stroke Chronic pain (morphine, prialt) Nociceptive pain Applications for Intrathecal Pain Pumps
Spasticity Trial • Single bolus injection (50 mcg) • Check effect over 8 hours • >8 hour- start with ½ dose • <8 hour- start with 2X dose • No effect- increase bolus for trial • Baclofen (Lioresal)- concentration for direct delivery is much more effective than oral baclofen.
Pain Pump Trial • Morphine • Single bolus- will indicate adverse effects • Indwelling catheter to increase morphine dose to gain starting point for dosage in permanent pump.
Patient selection Diagnostic Work Up • MRI • CT • Plain X-rays • Labs, INR, PTT
Pre-op • Pump size: 40 cc vs. 20 cc • Drug of choice: Lioresal, other • Chlorahexadine shower & wipes • Revision- always have representative interrogate before surgery.
Pre-op • Confirm pump size/ drug amount • Confirm plan for admission-including rehabilitation unit • Often involves caregiver • Introduce representative
Intra-opOperating Room • Pre-operative antibiotics • Patient positioned in full lateral decubitus- may have to be creative! • Gel pressure points • Prep and drape back and abdomen simultaneously.
Intra-opOperating Room • Local anesthesia • Minimal incision- don’t let the incision sacrifice accuracy or angle of reach. Need room to secure catheter. • Para-spinal lumbar puncture (L2-3-4) to prevent shearing of the catheter • Brisk flow of CSF • C-arm fluoroscopy to check catheter placement
Implantation • Catheter is placed intrathecally (usually L3 or L4) and tunneled subcutaneously to the pump. • Tip placement at the T10-T11 level • Acute hospital length of stay is 3-5 days
Posterior lumbarAnchoring the catheter • 2 pursestring sutures- with Touhy needle in place • 2 butterfly anchors- anchor butterfly to catheter, anchor butterfly to fascia • Need to have fascial tissue, not fat • Protect catheter at all times (new catheter is not as delicate) • Allow for strain relief loop
Abdomen • Placement in RLQ or LLQ-patient preference • Below the waistline • 2.5 cm beneath the skin • Sub-fascial –extremely thin patients • Trim catheter- hand off excess to be measured • Check for CSF flow after tunneling • 2 sutures to anchor pump • Catheter lies posterior to the pump • Access pump to confirm CSF flow before closing incision. • Copious antibiotic irrigation, anterior & posterior
Intra-opOperating Room • Interrogate system before closure • Meticulous closure • Antibiotic ointment • Tegaderm dressing • Abdominal binder to prevent migration of generator • Flat for 12 hours
Post-op • Pain medications • Antibiotics for 24 hours • Bathing instructions • Wound care instructions • Watch for complications- lack of drug delivery, infection