A 19- year- old male weighing 63 Kg was presented to the emergency department, in Samtah General Hospital in the south of the kingdom of Saudi Arabia, complaining of acute abdomen which was diagnosed to be appendicitis. The diagnosis was confirmed by the ultrasound and CT of abdomen and the decision was to do open appendectomy.
In preoperative assessment, the patient was medically free, fasting and showing normal laboratories. He was very anxious about losing his consciousness and consequently he totally refused general anaesthesia. Moreover, he refused to have spinal anesthesia. The best modality that was available at that moment was TAP block with adjuvant local anesthetics infiltration and intravenous opioids with the promise to preserve his consciousness all through the surgery.
In the operating room, full monitoring was connected (non invasive blood pressure, oxygen saturation, and ECG), intravenous line was inserted, and TAP block was done using ultrasound machine linear probe under complete aseptic technique.
The patient was lying flat and his abdomen was exposed. He was cleaned by chlorohexidine gluconate and isopropyl alcohol (chloraPrep®). The linear probe (HFL38x, 13 - 6 MHz) of M-Turbo® ultrasound system (Sonosite, Bothell, WA, USA) machine was covered by sterile sheath and the probe was located over the right side moving from medial to lateral until the three muscle planes were recognized midway between the costal margin and iliac crest (
6). Local anesthesia 5 mL lignocaine 1% was infiltrated and then a spinal needle (Quincke 22G) was advanced in the plane under the guidance of ultrasound image until it reached the transversus abdominis plane. 30 mL of 0.5% bupivacaine was injected in real time and the hypoechoic shades of local anesthesia spread were followed and confirmed.
After 15 minutes, the area covered by the block was checked and it was found to be anaesthetized. The surgeon was allowed to start, with instructions, to give adjuvant boluses of lignocaine 2% when needed. Fortunately the appendix was exposed in the right iliac fossa (mediocaecal) and the surgery was easy and short (15 minutes). The patient was given sedation and analgesia in the form of Fentanyl 50 mcg + midazolam 2 mg only and the surgeon did not give any local anaesthetic infiltration. His vital signs were within normal all through the operations. He did not complain of pain, traction, or vomiting.
In the postoperative care unit, the patient was lying flat and pain free, he could ambulate and void urine and was completely satisfied.