Indications
- Hand laceration or injury
- Boxer’s fractures
Contraindications
- Infection overlying injection site
- Allergy to local anesthetic
- Vascular injury/injection: the ulnar nerve runs with the ulnar artery, ensure a negative aspiration prior to injection
Equipment
- 5cc of local anesthetic of choice
- 25-27G needle
- Saline Flush
- Cleansing solution
- Ultrasound with high-frequency linear transducer
- Ultrasound transducer sterile cover
Ultrasound
Approach #1 (Elbow)
- Position the patient with the arm extended, or with the forearm across the patient’s abdomen, with elbow flexed to 90 degrees
- Place the transducer transversely 2-3cm proximal to the elbow at the medial of the upper arm
- The ulnar nerve is seen superficial to the triceps muscle and typically does not accompany an artery, in contrast to the median nerve
- Surround target with local anesthetic
Approach #2 (Wrist)
- Position the forearm abducted from the patient, supinated
- Place the probe transversely 3-4cm proximal to the wrist
- Immediately ulnar to the artery will be the ulnar nerve
- If the artery and nerve are too close, trace proximally to separate the nerve from the artery
- Surround target with local anesthetic
Examples