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Dr. Todd Ponsky

Pediatric Surgery · View profile →

Update Course Rewind: Pectus Excavatum 2021

Video Published 2022-09-01 Updated 2026-06-02

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Topic Overview

Pediatric surgeons debate optimal perioperative pain control for pectus excavatum repair, comparing cryoanalgesia (dramatic reduction in hospital stay to 1 day), erector spinae catheters (2-day stays with reduced opioids), and traditional epidural/PCA approaches. While cryoanalgesia shows impressive short-term results, concerns remain about long-term neuropathic complications due to limited device regulation and follow-up data.

Key Takeaways

  • Cryoanalgesia (freezing ribs 4-7 for 2min each) reduced pectus repair hospital stay from 4 days to 1 day with dramatic opioid reduction.
  • Long-term safety data for cryoanalgesia is lacking; concern exists for chronic neuropathic pain as medical devices bypass FDA clinical trials.
  • Erector spinae catheters (5-day duration, family-removed at home) achieve 2-day hospital stays with reduced opioid use as alternative to epidural.
  • Multimodal pain control includes preoperative gabapentin, intraoperative methadone/clonidine, and postoperative ketamine with child life support.
  • Patient functional status at discharge differs significantly between techniques; cryoanalgesia patients report superior comfort despite similar timing.

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