Department of Anesthesia  Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine  University of Iowa Health Care  University of Iowa
  Regional Anesthesia Study Center of Iowa  The University of Iowa
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 Animal-based Workshop for Hands-on Teaching of Regional Anesthesia: The Living Simulator
With special emphasis on catheter placement for continuous nerve, plexus and neuraxial blocks

André P. Boezaart, M.D.,
Ph.D. Department of Anesthesia, University of Iowa
Introduction:

According to the studies of Kopacz, confidence is the most important factor in using regional anaesthesia (RA) effectively1. This confidence is only gained by experience and training. Even for epidural and spinal anaesthesia it appears that Residents in Anesthesia require between 45 and 90 attempts before they become really proficient2. Although similar data for peripheral nerve blocks are lacking, Brown estimated that even more peripheral nerve blocks might need to be performed to achieve proficiency3. With more advanced techniques, such as the placement of catheters for the management of acute pain, some anaesthesiologists may never become proficient due to a lack of training and experience and their patients may never enjoy the benefits of these techniques. Brown3 believes that we have reached a plateau in the practice of RA due to four fundamental factors limiting further progress. These factors are: 1) the lack of RA equipment (now being addressed by Arrow International – StimuCath; BBraun – Contiplex; Pajunk – Plexilong and Sterimed - Alphaplex), 2) predictable variation in the duration of action local anaesthetic agents – especially long-lasting agents, 3) regional anaesthetic training (partially addressed by this type of proposed workshop) and 4) practice (outcome) measurement.

Teaching institutions often lack the specific expertise, time or opportunities to teach RA. Even physicians who train at centers enthusiastic about RA use these techniques on less than 30% of the cases in their in practices3. This lack of confidence and teaching opportunities, together with the ethical constraints of having human beings on the receiving end of a needle held by untrained and inexperienced hands, often leads to abandonment of RA techniques. As a result, anesthesiologists often follow the less effective methods of systemic analgesics or (at best) single shot RA for the management of intra- and post-operative pain.

Dr A P Boezaart initiated this training method at the University of Stellenbosch in South Africa. It was very successful and involves a teaching programme that furnishes anaesthesiologists with the necessary skills and confidence to perform these blocks without having to put patients at risk. Cadaver-based human anatomy forms the first cornerstone pillar of the “whet-lab/workshop” training. The main principles of simulator training are then used when anesthetized pigs are used for the second pillar, namely repetitive placement of needles and catheters onto nerves and nerve plexuses and for special techniques such as epidural catheterization and retrobulbar injection. The third and final pillar of the workshop is a multimedia presentation (including demonstrations on healthy volunteers) and an interactive session where all the techniques are discussed with attendees.

The basic philosophy of the program is that, in order to be of value, the training program is designed to be:

  • Based on human anatomy
  • Hands-on
  • Repetitive
  • Applicable to human practice

Everybody who is currently proficient in Regional Anesthesia learned the skills on human patients and by making mistakes and having failures. On the sharp end of the needle is, however, always a real human being and, although mistakes and failures are, with proper supervision, being limited to an absolute minimum, they do occur. Through repeated failure in a stressful environment with real patients in clinical practice, trainees either persist and continue to make mistakes until they have developed the necessary skills (at the cost of their patients), or they give up on Regional Anesthesia and in doing so deprive their patients of this valuable way of managing their acute pain.

The aim of this program is to offer trainees the opportunity to practice the initial blocks and catheter placements and to develop their initial skills in a stress free environment where mistakes and failures do not matter. Once proficient, trainees should be much more confident about safely introducing these techniques into their clinical practice on humans. The latter has been the experience of the University of Stellenbosch program. One example is a trainee who practiced 27 epidural catheter placements at one animal workshop session before he regarded himself as proficient – an opinion that was shared with the course leader. Participants who attended the workshops had no problems doing epidural and perineural catheterizations on human patients thereafter.

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