Saphenous Nerve Injection
(Redirected from Adductor Canal Block)
Other Names
- Saphenous Nerve Injection
- Saphenous Nerve Block
- Adductor Canal Block
Background


Key Points
- Needle: 2-3 inches, 22-25 gauge
- Transducer: high frequency linear
Anatomy of the Saphenous Nerve
- Distal cutaneous branch of the femoral nerve
- Supplies innervation to the medial knee, leg and foot
- Arises from the posterior division of the femoral nerve at the mid thigh
- Accompanies the femoral artery within the adductor canal
- The saphenous nerve exits the canal via the adductor hiatus
- Here, it pierces the fascia between sartorius and gracilis
- It then travels superficially along the medial side of the leg
- Accompanying the saphenous vein
Palpation Guidance vs Ultrasound Guidance
- This procedure can not be safely or reliably performed by landmark guidance
- There are no papers comparing landmark to ultrasound guidance
Indications
- Saphenous Nerve Syndrome
- Regional anesthesia for surgery
- Certain medial knee pathology
Contraindications
- Absolute
- Anaphylaxis to injectates
- Overlying cellulitis, skin lesion or systemic infection
- Relative
- Can be treated with less invasive means
- Hyperglycemia or poorly controlled diabetes
- Lack of symptom improvement with previous injection
Procedure


Equipment
- Sterile prep (i.e. chloraprep, chlorhexidine, iodine, etc)
- Gloves
- Needle: typically 21-25 gauge, 1.5 inch
- Syringe: 5-10 mL
- Gauze
- Ethyl Chloride
- Bandage
- Injectate
- Local anesthetic
- Corticosteroid
- Sterile probe cover
Ultrasound Findings
- Common ultrasound findings include:
- Patients may report pain on sonopalpation
- Occasionally, a neuroma can be seen
Technique: Short Axis, In Plane
- Patient Position
- Supine
- Leg is externally rotated and knee slightly flexed
- Transducer Position
- Short axis to saphenous nerve
- Needle Approach/ Orientation
- In plane
- Anterior to posterior/ posterior to anterior
- Target
- Directly adjacent to the saphenous nerve
- Pearls and Pitfalls
- Nerve is sometimes difficult to visualize
- Can inject into the fascial plane adjacent to the nerve
- Femoral vessels can serve as a landmark
Aftercare
- Motor exam should be intact
- No major restrictions in most cases
- Can augment with ice, NSAIDS
- Consider Knee Compression Sleeve
Complications
- Infection
- Damage to surrounding tissue
See Also
References
Created by:
John Kiel on 17 April 2025 14:03:35
Authors:
Last edited:
17 April 2025 15:08:31
Category: