Abstract:

A 71-year-old woman with diabetic neuropathy who had undergone amputation of the right lower leg for diabetic gangrene 4 years previously, experienced severe lightning pain in both legs during spinal anesthesia. She was scheduled for skin grafting for a burn ulcer on her left foot. Her preoperative physical examination revealed hypesthesia in both legs due to diabetic neuropathy. Spinal anesthesia was performed with a combined spinal-epidural needle at the L 4-5 interspace using 2.0 ml of 0.3% hyperbaric dibucaine in the left lateral position. The region of hypesthesia was spread below Th 4. Ten minutes later, she complained of severe lightning pain in both legs and midazolam 1 mg was administered intravenously against agitation. The severe lightning pain diminished after the administration of pentazocine 7.5 mg intravenously in the recovery room. There was no worsening of neurological findings 5 hours later when the effect of spinal anesthesia disappeared. This clinical picture seems to be different from that of reported cases of phantom limb pain during spinal anesthesia in which severe lightning pain occurred in both legs. This case suggests that patients with diabetic neuropathy might develop severe lightning pain during spinal anesthesia using dibucaine.

Kato, Tada, Abe, Okada, Mori, Go, Kohyama, , (2000). [Severe lightning pain during spinal anesthesia in a patient with diabetic neuropathy]. Masui. The Japanese journal of anesthesiology, 2000 Sep;49(9):1021-3. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11025960