Views: 0 Author: Site Editor Publish Time: 2025-07-21 Origin: Site
The epidural needle is a vital specialized instrument used in clinical anesthesia and pain management. It features a specially designed structure with a strong, hollow body, usually equipped with precise depth markings and a syringe interface for sensing tissue resistance. Its core function is to achieve precise puncture into the epidural space of a specific spinal segment.
Regarding the epidural needle size, its length should be flexibly selected based on the patient’s anatomical differences and the depth of the targeted intervertebral space. The standard length range is 7 to 12 cm. Shorter needles (7–9 cm) may be suitable for slender adults, while longer needles (10–12 cm) are often required for obese patients to penetrate thicker layers of subcutaneous fat and ligamentous structures.
During the procedure, the tip of the epidural needle must ultimately be inserted into the epidural space located at the midline of the selected intervertebral level. The puncture site is chosen based on the termination level of the spinal cord and nerve roots—most commonly within the lumbar region—while ensuring the spinal cord substance is not injured. The needle passes through the tough dura mater to reach the potential space of the epidural cavity.
The main function of an epidural needle is to establish a precise passage to the epidural space for drug delivery. The mechanism of action revolves around the following critical steps:
The physician advances the needle through the skin and ligaments until the tip precisely stops within the epidural space, forming a sealed channel toward the area surrounding the nerve roots. The hollow shaft serves as the only conduit for medication or catheter placement.
-- Medications (such as a single-dose anesthetic or analgesic) can be directly injected.
-- Alternatively, a catheter may be inserted into the space for continuous or intermittent drug delivery (e.g., labor analgesia or postoperative pain relief).
Drugs (local anesthetics or analgesics) spread and penetrate within the epidural space. They act on the traversing spinal nerve roots or the surface of the spinal cord:
-- Local anesthetics primarily block small nerve fibers responsible for transmitting pain, inhibiting the conduction of nerve impulses.
-- Analgesics bind to specific receptors to interfere with pain signal transmission.
In this way, the medications exert highly selective blockade effects at key points of neural signal transmission, effectively preventing pain signals from reaching the brain. This achieves powerful regional anesthesia or analgesia (such as for lower limb surgery or labor) without inducing general anesthesia. The central design goal is to safely establish a drug delivery channel directly to the targeted neural region.
· Medications act precisely on the targeted nerve segment, significantly reducing the risk of systemic side effects (e.g., loss of consciousness, severe respiratory or circulatory depression).
· The needle design (such as a blunt, angled tip) and careful technique help avoid spinal cord injury.
· Dosage and spread of the medication can be finely controlled, making risks easier to manage than with general anesthesia.
· The patient remains conscious during the procedure, facilitating communication and condition assessment.
· The effects of medication are typically reversible and manageable.
· Puncture steps (e.g., loss-of-resistance technique) are relatively standardized and technically mature.
· Catheter placement provides a stable, continuous, and adjustable medication delivery route.
· Widely applicable for intraoperative anesthesia, postoperative pain relief, labor analgesia, and chronic neuropathic pain interventions.
· Rapid onset of action with easily controllable effect duration.
· Capable of providing deep, stable, and predictable regional analgesia or anesthesia.
· Compared to systemic drugs, side effects (e.g., nausea, vomiting, itching) are generally milder and less frequent.
· Offers significant comfort for prolonged pain relief situations (e.g., childbirth, postoperative recovery).
· As a mature technology, its efficacy and safety have been validated by extensive clinical use.
· Reduces reliance on costly general anesthetics and volatile inhalation agents.
· Facilitates faster recovery of gastrointestinal function and earlier ambulation, significantly shortening hospital stays.
· Lowers incidence and treatment costs of serious postoperative complications such as deep vein thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, and lung infections.
· Catheter management generally requires less clinical staff time than continuous intravenous analgesia pumps or frequent manual injections.
Forms the main body of the needle, typically a standard 18G hollow stainless-steel tube for tissue penetration and access to the epidural space. The stainless-steel construction ensures strength and flexibility. The shaft is usually marked with depth graduations.
A thinner inner core that fits snugly inside the cannula. When inserted, it fully fills the needle’s lumen, ensuring a smooth and unobstructed tip during penetration through dense ligaments.
The tip of the outer cannula is beveled into a smooth tapered surface. This design aids in separating tissue layers rather than cutting through them, reducing the risk of nerve injury and enhancing the operator’s tactile perception of the characteristic "loss of resistance" when the ligamentum flavum is breached.
Located at the rear of the needle, this standard Luer connector allows for secure syringe attachment to perform resistance testing or drug injection. It also facilitates connection to an epidural catheter for long-term infusion.
The needle’s surface typically features clear depth lines or precise graduations to help the operator accurately judge insertion depth and control needle positioning.
Thoroughly disinfect the skin at the puncture site and drape with sterile towels. Inject a local anesthetic at the chosen intervertebral level to create a wheal and achieve deep tissue infiltration.
Advance the epidural needle slowly along the midline or paramedian approach. It should pass sequentially through the skin, subcutaneous tissue, supraspinous ligament, and interspinous ligament. Continue until resistance increases markedly at the ligamentum flavum. With gentle, sustained pressure, continue insertion until a sudden loss of resistance is felt, indicating entry into the epidural space. Confirm the position using negative pressure testing or a second loss-of-resistance check.
Remove the needle’s stylet. Gently thread a flexible catheter through the needle lumen into the epidural space to the desired depth. Fix the catheter end and slowly withdraw the needle sheath, ensuring the catheter remains in place.
Secure the catheter to the patient's back to prevent displacement. Inject a test dose of local anesthetic through the catheter, carefully observe the patient for reactions, and rule out intravascular or subarachnoid misplacement. Once confirmed, proceed with continuous infusion or targeted drug administration.
No, it must not be reused. Current medical protocols mandate that epidural needles be sterile, single-use instruments. Reuse after disinfection is strictly prohibited.
· Infection Risk: The internal microstructures of the device are difficult to sterilize completely. Any residual pathogens may cause deep infections such as epidural abscess.
· Contamination: Chemical residues (e.g., glutaraldehyde) or microparticles from the disinfection process may enter the epidural space, leading to neurotoxicity or granuloma formation.
· Blunting and Breakage: Repeated use dulls the tip, increasing the risk of tissue tearing during insertion. Metal fatigue may also result in needle breakage and retention inside the body.
· Procedure-Related: Dural puncture headaches, inadvertent intravascular injection causing local anesthetic toxicity, nerve injury, epidural hematoma.
· Long-Term Effects: Rare cases of catheter retention, local infections, or adhesive neuropathy.
· Drug Reactions: Hypotension, respiratory depression, allergic responses (related to the administered drug).