학술논문

Anfänge der kontinuierlichen Wundinfusion mit Lokalanästhetika: Unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Beiträge von Walter Capelle und Ewald Fulde
Document Type
Original Paper
Source
Der Anaesthesist: Zeitschrift für Anästhesie, Intensivmedizin, Notfall- und Katastrophenmedizin, Schmerztherapie. July 2017 66(7):518-529
Subject
Geschichte der lokalen Wundinfusion mit Lokalanästhetika
Daueranästhesie der Bauchdecken
Lokale Wundperfusion mit Lokalanästhetika
Postoperative Schmerztherapie mit Tetracain
History of local wound infusion with local anaesthetics
Continuous analgesia of the abdominal wall
Local perfusion with local anaesthetics
Postoperative pain therapy with tetracaine
Language
German
ISSN
0003-2417
1432-055X
Abstract
Wound infusion with local anesthetics is a proven and safe analgesic procedure for modern perioperative patient care. Even the pioneers of local anesthesia practiced wound analgesia and emphasized the shortcomings of “single-shot” wound infusions. At the same time, they drew attention to the importance of long-lasting pain relief to prevent sequelae, especially after upper abdominal surgery with pneumonia, embolic events or postoperative ileus. In the early 1930s there were first sustained efforts to improve the efficiency and quality of pain therapy, especially after upper abdominal surgery by continuous wound infiltration with local anesthetics via intraoperatively introduced special cannulas. This measure was carried out to enable reduction in pain and allow early postoperative mobilization. The conceptual development of this pioneering analgesia method is closely connected with the names of the Berlin surgeons Walter Capelle and Ewald Fulde; however, their inaugurated and propagated therapy concept did not find the attention and dissemination that it deserved. This is a reason for us to remember their pioneering ideas on pain management in the context of current developments.