My mother recently got a nerve block in the shoulder, it has been about 10-12 hours and her arm is completely paralyzed. She cannot move it at all and feels nothing. Is this a side effect or is it normal. If side effect is it long term, would it be permanent if so?
What would be the reason to do the injection blind in comparison with the ultrasound guided. If the patient is in alot of pain and can't wait to be scheduled for ultrasound? I know it can be very expensive for the ultrasound type, because when I had them, it was outpatient in the hospital. It would be great to have them in the office using the blind injection. Does the Ortho Doctor do these, or just a Pain Management Doctor?
You should be to either side of the notch but not in it... I have zero medical training but I just watched something like 45 videos on this procedure and nearly all of them mention that except for yours... that's how I know. What?... I have to go get it done and I'm curious... and when you can get not just a second opinion, but multiple, with the tap of a screen... why not put them to use.
The recommended location for this injection is underneath the transverse ligament. you can do it anywhere along the notch as long as the flow of medication is under the ligament and you are not in the artery.
@kaleidoscopekay pain or ortho docs can do this
not too many docs know how to do ultrasound,that is why I uploaded the video
Thank you Dr Nail, I do really find your videos both informative, illustrative and full of useful clinical and practical knowledge
Thank you doctor, the most clear explanation I could check
thanks
Thank you ☺️☺️
Great video doc. Thanks
Thanks doctor
Thank you sir.
Is it helpful to relieve frozen shoulder pain?
It’s helpful aloot just did it today
@orthopassion THANKS
Good, thanks
beutiful explianed dr...can you tell me the containts of the injection
My mother recently got a nerve block in the shoulder, it has been about 10-12 hours and her arm is completely paralyzed. She cannot move it at all and feels nothing. Is this a side effect or is it normal. If side effect is it long term, would it be permanent if so?
Did it get better mine is the same way.
That is likely normal. A long acting local anesthetic may work for 24 hrs, sometimes longer.
e aí, ela melhorou?
Ohh wow, I'm going in for this
That’s the whole point of the shot 🤦🏾♂️
@fj783 thanks
Thank you very much!
thank U, always,
I understand. Thank You
What would be the reason to do the injection blind in comparison with the ultrasound guided. If the patient is in alot of pain and can't wait to be scheduled for ultrasound? I know it can be very expensive for the ultrasound type, because when I had them, it was outpatient in the hospital. It would be great to have them in the office using the blind injection. Does the Ortho Doctor do these, or just a Pain Management Doctor?
both can but I go to the pain clinic.
Most pain management Dr's are also Anesthesiologists.
Do you know anyone in the Washington DC area capable of doing an ultrasound guided injection here?
Check with any Pain Clinic.
supascabler
+superfly1842 lmao
what is the point of a nerve block? What does this cure?
Pain
You should be to either side of the notch but not in it... I have zero medical training but I just watched something like 45 videos on this procedure and nearly all of them mention that except for yours... that's how I know.
What?... I have to go get it done and I'm curious... and when you can get not just a second opinion, but multiple, with the tap of a screen... why not put them to use.
The recommended location for this injection is underneath the transverse ligament. you can do it anywhere along the notch as long as the flow of medication is under the ligament and you are not in the artery.
Omg😂
Do not ever get this bullshit
Shukerun
thanks
Thanks