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Figure 5: The block needle comes from a lateral to medial approach to deposit anesthetic under the iliacus muscle. The goal is to spread anechoic anesthetic (yellow circles) under the psoas tendon between the iliacus muscle and the bony ramus.

By Joseph Harrington | on February 17, 2022 | 0 Comment
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Figure 5: The block needle comes from a lateral to medial approach to deposit anesthetic under the iliacus muscle. The goal is to spread anechoic anesthetic (yellow circles) under the psoas tendon between the iliacus muscle and the bony ramus.

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Figure 5: The block needle comes from a lateral to medial approach to deposit anesthetic under the iliacus muscle. The goal is to spread anechoic anesthetic (yellow circles) under the psoas tendon between the iliacus muscle and the bony ramus.

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Figure 5: The block needle comes from a lateral to medial approach to deposit anesthetic under the iliacus muscle. The goal is to spread anechoic anesthetic (yellow circles) under the psoas tendon between the iliacus muscle and the bony ramus.