Indications: Analgesia for thoracic and upper abdominal surgery, analgesia for rib fracture and to facilitate ventilation in flail chest, and treatment of neuropathic pain such as postherpetic neuralgia and cancer-related pain syndromes. Can also be used as a diagnostic procedure to differentiate neuropathic pain from visceral pain.
Approach and Technique: Skin wheals are raised over the area to be blocked with 1% lidocaine. For a right-handed operator, the left index finger is placed over the skin wheal and the skin is retracted cephalad
(Fig. 20-2A). The needle is advanced perpendicularly onto the rib. The needle is grasped between the index finger and thumb of the operator’s left hand. Resting the hypothenar eminence against the patient’s paraspinal muscle steadies the left hand. The needle is now slowly and methodically walked off the rib in a caudal direction
(Fig. 20-2B). Once off the inferior border of the rib, the needle is slowly advanced into the neurovascular sheath, which should lie no more than 8 mm below the upper border of the rib. A slight “pop” may be felt as the needle enters the sheath. After aspiration, 3 to 5 mL of local anesthetic solution is injected at each level. The procedure is repeated at each level to be blocked.