Active Ingredient: Levobupivacaine
Clinicians who perform retrobulbar blocks should be aware that there have been reports of respiratory arrest following local anaesthetic injection. Prior to retrobulbar block, as with all other regional procedures, the immediate availability of equipment, drugs, and personnel to manage respiratory arrest or depression, convulsions, and cardiac stimulation or depression should be assured. As with other anaesthetic procedures, patients should be constantly monitored following ophthalmic blocks for signs of these adverse reactions.
For this indication, competent medicine agencies globally authorize below treatments:
Ophthalmic
37.5 - 112.5 mg
From 37.5 To 112.5 mg once every day
The table below is a guide to dosage for the more commonly used blocks. For analgesia (e.g. epidural administration for pain management), the lower concentrations and doses are recommended. Where profound or prolonged anaesthesia is required with dense motor block (e.g. epidural or peribulbar block), the higher concentrations may be used. Careful aspiration before and during injection is recommended to prevent intravascular injection.
There is limited safety experience with levobupivacaine therapy for periods exceeding 24 hours. In order to minimise the risk for severe neurological complications, the patient and the duration of administration of levobupivacaine should be closely monitored (see section 4.4).
Aspiration should be repeated before and during administration of a bolus dose, which should be injected slowly and in incremental doses, at a rate of 7.5–30 mg/min, while closely observing the patient’s vital functions and maintaining verbal contact.
If toxic symptoms occur, the injection should be stopped immediately.
The maximum dosage must be determined by evaluating the size and physical status of the patient, together with the concentration of the agent and the area and route of administration. Individual variation in onset and duration of block does occur. Experience from clinical studies shows onset of sensory block adequate for surgery in 10-15 minutes following epidural administration, with a time to regression in the range of 6-9 hours.
The recommended maximum single dose is 150 mg. Where sustained motor and sensory block are required for a prolonged procedure, additional doses may be required. The maximum recommended dose during a 24 hour period is 400 mg. For post-operative pain management, the dose should not exceed 18.75 mg/hour.
Table of doses:
Concentration (mg/ml)1 | Dose | Motor Block | |
---|---|---|---|
Surgical Anaesthesia | |||
Ophthalmic (peribulbar block) | 7.5 | 5–15 ml (37.5-112.5 mg) | Moderate to complete |
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