Local anaesthetic and the periprostatic block
Practical pain control: where the needle goes, safe doses, and recognising toxicity.
Good local anaesthetic is the difference between a calm awake biopsy and a miserable one. It is also a genuine safety skill. Let us cover both the comfort and the caution.
The raw multi-parametric scan.
Segmented gland, zones and lesion as a rotatable model.
Future spatial-computing workflows for placing the anatomy model in clinical space.
01 Making it tolerable 3 min
Half of pain control is not pharmacological. Talk the patient through each step, raise a small skin wheal first, and inject slowly. Rushed, silent injecting hurts more.
A simple, non-drug way to reduce biopsy pain?
02 The periprostatic block 4 min
The key target is the periprostatic nerve supply, around the base of the gland and near the neurovascular bundles. For transperineal work you also infiltrate the perineal skin and track, and sometimes the apex.
The key deep target for the block is what?
03 Safe doses 4 min
Local anaesthetic is safe within limits and dangerous beyond them. For lidocaine, a rough ceiling is around 3 mg/kg plain, or about 7 mg/kg with adrenaline. Keep a running total, and be especially careful in small or elderly patients.
Why keep a running total of the lidocaine used?
04 Spotting LAST 4 min
LAST, local anaesthetic systemic toxicity, is rare but serious. Early warning signs are neurological: perioral tingling, a metallic taste, ringing in the ears, agitation or confusion. It can progress to seizures and cardiac collapse.
If you suspect it: stop injecting, call for help, manage the airway, and follow the lipid emulsion (Intralipid) protocol.
An early sign of local anaesthetic systemic toxicity?
That is Module 7. You can make a biopsy comfortable and recognise the rare but serious complication.
Next: Specimen handling and the histology interface →