Ultrasound-Guided Mental Nerve Block



Ultrasound-Guided Mental Nerve Block





CLINICAL CONSIDERATIONS

Ultrasound-guided mental nerve block is useful in the diagnosis and treatment of a variety of painful conditions in areas subserved by the mental nerve, including mental neuralgia, mental nerve entrapment, and pain secondary to herpes zoster (Fig. 13.1). This technique is also useful in providing surgical anesthesia in the distribution of the mental nerve for lesion removal, cosmetic procedures, dental surgery, and laceration repair. The mental nerve can be blocked via either an extraoral or intraoral approach. The intraoral approach to mental nerve block is especially useful in providing surgical anesthesia in the distribution of the mental nerve for lesion removal and laceration repair when a cosmetic result is desired because the intraoral approach avoids distortion of the facial anatomy from local anesthetic infiltration at the surgical site. The intraoral approach is also useful in the pediatric population as the oral mucosa can be anesthetized with topical application of local anesthetic prior to needle placement.






FIGURE 13.1. Three-dimensional computed tomographic volume-rendered reconstruction of mandible: edentulous mandible with bone loss along the left (B), alveolar margin compared with the right (A), with unroofing of the left mental foramen (arrow), is shown. (Reused from Szewka AJ, Purdy HMS, Topel J, et al. Teaching neuroimages: numb chin syndrome in an edentulous patient. Neurology 2011;77(6):e38, with permission.)


CLINICALLY RELEVANT ANATOMY

The mental nerve is a pure sensory nerve arising from fibers from the mandibular nerve.

Along with the mental branch of the inferior alveolar artery, the mental nerve exits the mandible via the mental foramen at the level of the second premolar, where it makes a sharp turn superiorly and separates into branches (Fig. 13.2). It is at this point that the nerve is especially vulnerable to trauma and entrapment (Fig. 13.3). The nerve provides cutaneous branches that innervate the lower lip, chin, and corresponding oral mucosa (Fig. 13.4). In rare instances, the mental nerve may exit the mandible via separate mental foramen.







FIGURE 13.2. The mental nerve exits the mandible via the mental foramen at the level of the second premolar, where it makes a sharp turn superiorly.






FIGURE 13.3. The mental nerve. A: Illustration and (B) photograph showing incision of the periosteum that covers the nerve branches. C: Photograph showing dissection of the periosteum from the nerve branches. D: Photograph showing dissection of individual branches of the mental nerve with scissors to facilitate mobilization. E: Illustration showing the branches of the mental nerve dissected from their enveloping periosteum. F: Photograph showing use of a periosteal elevator to strip the periosteum below the mental foramen. Note that the branches of the mental nerve have been freed and are quite mobile. (Ellis E, Zide MF. Surgical Approaches to the Facial Skeleton. 3rd ed. Philadelphia: Wolters Kluwer; 2019.)







FIGURE 13.4. The sensory distribution of the mental nerve.

Mar 1, 2020 | Posted by in ANESTHESIA | Comments Off on Ultrasound-Guided Mental Nerve Block

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