Head & Neck EYE BLOCKS
 
  Chandra M Kumar, MD, Ph.D
Middlesbrough
United Kingdom
FEATURE
 
   

1. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
Evidence Report/Technology Assessment: Number 16: Anaesthesia Management During Cataract Surgery (accessed from http://www.ahcpr.gov/clinic/epcsums/anestsum.htm on 18 Nov 2004)

2. Bron AJ, Tripathi R, Tripathi B.
Wolf’s anatomy of the Eye and Orbit. Chapman and Hall, London, 1997.

3. Dutton JJ.
Atlas of Clinical and Surgical Orbital Anatomy. Saunders 1994.   

4. Friedman DS, Reeves SW, Bass EB, Lubomski LH, Fleisher LA, Schein OD.
Patient preferences for anaesthesia management during cataract surgery. Br J Ophthalmol 2004; 88: 333-5

5. Hamilton RC. A discourse on the complications of retrobulbar and peribulbar blockade. Can J Ophthalmol 2000; 35: 363-72

6. Hardwick M
Fundamentals of Regional Anaesthesia edrs Fischer HBJ, Pinnock CA. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2004.

7. Kumar CM, Dodds C, Faanning GL
Ophthalmic anaesthesia, Swets and Zeitlinger, The Netherlands, 2002

8. Kumar C M.
Akinetic ophthalmic block with a short needle. CPD Anaesthesia 2001;3: 97-102

9. Kumar C M & McNeela B J.
Comparison of ultrasonic localisation of anaesthetic fluids with 3 different sub-Tenon’s cannulae. Eye 2003

10. Kumar CM, Williamson S, Manikam B.
Sub-Tenon’s block. European Journal of Anaesthesia 2005.

11. Local Anaesthesia for Intraocular Surgery. The Royal College of Anaesthetists and The Royal College of Ophthalmologists 2001 ( http://www.rcophth.ac.uk/members/members-documents/LocalAnaesthesia.pdf ).