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Alon P. Winnie

Northwestern University

Publishes on Anesthesia and Pain Management, Anesthesia and Sedative Agents, Spine and Intervertebral Disc Pathology. 181 papers and 4.3k citations.

181Publications
4.3kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Interscalene Brachial Plexus Block
Alon P. Winnie|Anesthesia & Analgesia|1970
Cited by 611

*Division of Anesthesiology, Cook County Hospital and Hektoen Institute for Medical Research of Cook County Hospital; Department of Anesthesia, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, Illinois 60612.

Interscalene Cervical Plexus Block
Alon P. Winnie, S. Ramamurthy, Zia Durrani et al.|Anesthesia & Analgesia|1975
Cited by 146

A review of the anatomy of the cervical plexus and surrounding structures suggests a single-injection technic which simplifies anesthesia of the cervical plexus and increases the margin of safety in this procedure. Used by the authors, the technic has been successful in 97 percent of over 100 cases.

Buprenorphine added to the local anesthetic for axillary brachial plexus block prolongs postoperative analgesia
Kenneth D. Candido, Alon P. Winnie, Ahmed Ghaleb et al.|Regional Anesthesia & Pain Medicine|2002
Cited by 130

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Buprenorphine added to local anesthetic solutions for supraclavicular block was found to triple postoperative analgesia duration in a previous study when compared with local anesthetic block alone. That study, however, did not control for potentially confounding factors, such as the possibility that buprenorphine was affecting analgesia through intramuscular absorption or via a spinal mechanism. To specifically delineate the role of buprenorphine in peripherally mediated opioid analgesia, the present study controlled for these 2 factors. METHODS: Sixty American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) P.S. I and II, consenting adults for upper extremity surgery, were prospectively assigned randomly in double-blind fashion to 1 of 3 groups. Group I received local anesthetic (1% mepivacaine, 0.2% tetracaine, epinephrine 1:200,000), 40 mL, plus buprenorphine, 0.3 mg, for axillary block, and intramuscular (IM) saline. Group II received local anesthetic-only axillary block, and IM buprenorphine 0.3 mg. Group III received local anesthetic-only axillary block and IM saline. Postoperative pain onset and intensity were compared, as was analgesic medication use. RESULTS: The mean duration of postoperative analgesia was 22.3 hours in Group I; 12.5 hours in group II, and 6.6 hours in group III. Differences between groups I and II were statistically significant (P =.0012). Differences both between groups I and III and II and III were also statistically significant (P <.001). CONCLUSIONS: Buprenorphine-local anesthetic axillary perivascular brachial plexus block provided postoperative analgesia lasting 3 times longer than local anesthetic block alone and twice as long as buprenorphine given by IM injection plus local anesthetic-only block. This supports the concept of peripherally mediated opioid analgesia by buprenorphine.