• ABSTRACT
    • Since it was described, wide-awake local anaesthesia no tourniquet (WALANT) has gained popularity. Our department has started using WALANT for hand surgery with increasing complexity. We present our results with WALANT rhizarthrosis surgery, including prosthetic replacement, trapeziectomy with suture button suspensionplasty and revision surgery. A retrospective review of all rhizarthrosis procedures under WALANT was performed from April 2021 to July 2022. We included patients who fulfilled inclusion criteria and had adequate imaging and clinical follow-up. A satisfaction survey was performed by telephone. Surgical time, complications, conversion to conventional anesthesia, pain, anxiety and global satisfaction were recorded. Tumescent anesthesia is performed 20-25 minutes before surgery, and is performed in four or five strategic locations that allow adequate anesthesia and vasoconstriction for the procedure to be comfortably carried out. We observed a series of 16 sequential surgeries involving 14 patients. All were female with a mean age of 65 years. Fourteen cases were performed due to primary rhizarthrosis, eight trapeziectomies with suture button suspensionplasty, six prosthetic replacements, and two revision surgeries. One patient needed to be converted to conventional anaesthesia due to anxiety during the procedure. Mean procedure time was 73 minutes. There were no WALANT-related complications. Mean patient-reported satisfaction with the anesthetic technique was a 9 (on a scale from 1 to 10) and 100% of patients would choose to undergo surgery with WALANT anesthesia for a future procedure. We find it useful to actively engage the patients during surgery to keep them comfortable and also help the surgeons assess stability and functional results. After wound closure, the hand is shown to the patient and he performs various tasks. There is somewhat of a learning curve for rhizarthrosis surgery under WALANT; patient comfort can be achieved through an adequate anesthetic technique and reassurance before and during surgery. We recommend that the first few cases be done in the presence of an anesthesiologist and a fasting patient in case there is a need to convert to conventional anesthesia. Wide awake rhizarthrosis surgery, even revision surgery, is safe and pain-free. Patient-reported satisfaction is also high. The authors find that including patient participation in their own surgery might be promising for post-op rehabilitation. There are limitations in this study such as the absence of a control conventional anesthesia group, the satisfaction questionnaire was not done immediately post-operatively, as such, a memory bias cannot be excluded, and it is not yet validated for the Portuguese population.