In response
- PMID: 26086520
- DOI: 10.1213/ANE.0000000000000752
In response
Comment on
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Intravenous and perineural dexamethasone in peripheral nerve block: are they truly equivalent?Anesth Analg. 2015 Jul;121(1):251. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0000000000000762. Anesth Analg. 2015. PMID: 26086518 No abstract available.
References
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- Williams BA, Hough KA, Tsui BY, Ibinson JW, Gold MS, Gebhart GF. Neurotoxicity of adjuvants used in perineural anesthesia and analgesia in comparison with ropivacaine. Reg Anesth Pain Med. 2011;36:225–30
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- Williams BA, Butt MT, Zeller JR, Coffee S, Pippi MA. Multimodal perineural analgesia with combined bupivacaine-clonidine-buprenorphine-dexamethasone: safe in vivo and chemically compatible in solution. Pain Med. 2015;16:186–98
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- Williams BA, Ibinson JW, Mangione MP, Modrak RT, Tonarelli EJ, Rakesh H, Kmatz AM, Cohen PZ. Research priorities regarding multimodal peripheral nerve blocks for postoperative analgesia and anesthesia based on hospital quality data extracted from over 1,300 cases (2011–2014). Pain Med. 2015;16:7–12
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- Williams BA, Bottegal MT, Kentor ML, Irrgang JJ, Williams JP. Rebound pain scores as a function of femoral nerve block duration after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction: retrospective analysis of a prospective, randomized clinical trial. Reg Anesth Pain Med. 2007;32:186–92
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- Williams BA, Ibinson JW, Mangione MP, Scanlan RL, Cohen PZ. Clinical benchmarks regarding multimodal peripheral nerve blocks for postoperative analgesia: observations regarding combined perineural midazolam-clonidine-buprenorphine-dexamethasone. Pain Med. 2015;16:1–6
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