Wisconsin Surgery Center CRNA Defends Safety of Spinal Anesthesia

John Dusenberg, a certified registered nurse anesthetist and advanced practice nurse prescriber at Manitowoc (Wis.) Surgery Center, recently answered a reader's question in HRTNews about whether spinal anesthesia is appropriate for knee replacement surgery.

Mr. Dusenberg assured the reader that spinal anesthesia is a safe option for knee replacement surgery. He explained the difference between general and regional anesthesia: While regional anesthesia provides pain relief to a large area of the body through the injection of medication close to related nerves, general anesthesia produces a state of unconsciousness where the patient remains asleep.

He said spinal anesthesia is a commonly used and safe alternative to general anesthesia and added that spinal anesthesia has some distinct advantages over general anesthesia. For example, patients are less likely to experience post-operative nausea and vomiting, and the anesthesia recovery period is generally more pleasant.

He said the overall risk of a spinal anesthetic is somewhere between 1 and 3 percent, depending on the research.

Read the HRTNews report on spinal anesthesia.

Related Articles on Anesthesia:
Patient Safety Tool: AANA's Conscious Sedation Brochure
ASA's Dr. John Dombrowski Discusses Pain Patch Benefits in Ladies' Home Journal
ASA: Anesthesiologists Should Host Site Visits for Lawmakers

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