Influence of Body Position on Identification of Tuffier's Line
Research type
Research Study
Full title
Influence of body position on the identification of Tuffier's line using the traditional palpation method: an ultrasound study.
IRAS ID
218764
Contact name
Nhathien Nguyen-Lu
Contact email
Sponsor organisation
GSTT
Duration of Study in the UK
1 years, 5 months, 1 days
Research summary
Anaesthetists insert epidurals or spinal anaesthetics (collectively called central neuraxial blocks) to patients during childbirth to provide pain relief and anaesthesia. A spinal anaesthetic involves the injection of pain relieving medicines directly into the sac of fluid that surrounds the spinal cord. An epidural uses a different technique to place a thin plastic tube into the fatty tissues that surround this sac.
Spinal anaesthesia must be placed below where the spinal cord ends to avoid nerve trauma. Doctors have traditionally been taught to identify a safe level, by feeling the top of a patients hips and drawing an imaginary line between these two points across the patients back known as Tuffier’s line. This identifies L4/5 interspace, below which anaesthetists avoids the termination of the spinal cord. The same blind “anatomical rule” is used throughout anaesthetics, whether the patient is male or female, young or old, pregnant or non-pregnant, supine or lateral, an approach that is clearly far from robust. The physiological changes of pregnancy such as fluid retention and weight gain can further make identification of the standard landmarks challenging. Advances in ultrasound technology have allowed direct visualisation of the bones in the back. Studies have shown that the conventional anatomical based method for locating the point of needle insertion is unreliable even amongst experienced anaesthetists.
Spinal or epidural anaesthesia can be performed with the patient either sitting or lying on their side. We aim to determine whether a difference exists between the perceived mid-point of the L4/L5 intervertebral space, identified using manual demarcation of Tuffier’s line, in these two positions. Ultrasound will then be used to ascertain the distance from the “true” midpoint. We aim to generate a new rule, specific to pregnant women, to aid the safe performance of neuraxial blockade using the palpation method.
REC name
North East - York Research Ethics Committee
REC reference
17/NE/0039
Date of REC Opinion
13 Feb 2017
REC opinion
Favourable Opinion