Unexpected transient femoral nerve palsy following epidural catheterization in total hip arthroplasty: A rare case report
Mohammad Poursalehian, Mohammadreza Razzaghof, Pantea Bozorg Savoji, Mohammad Ghorbanzadeh, Moeen Akbari Javar, S.M. Javad Mortazavi

TL;DR
A rare case of temporary femoral nerve palsy occurred after epidural catheterization during hip surgery, with full recovery within eight days.
Contribution
Reports a previously undocumented case of transient femoral nerve palsy following epidural catheterization in total hip arthroplasty.
Findings
Femoral nerve palsy occurred two days after epidural catheter placement at L2/3 level.
Neurological symptoms resolved fully within eight days without intervention.
MRI ruled out spinal cord compression or hematoma as causes.
Abstract
Total hip arthroplasty is frequently performed under spinal anesthesia, which is generally safe. However, rare neurological complications, such as femoral nerve palsy, may occur. This report describes an unprecedented case of transient femoral nerve palsy following epidural catheterization in total hip arthroplasty. A 44-year-old male with femoral head avascular necrosis underwent left total hip arthroplasty. An epidural catheter was placed at the L2/3 level for postoperative pain management without complications. Two days postoperatively, the patient developed right-sided femoral nerve palsy. MRI scans revealed no spinal cord compression or hematoma. The patient's neurological symptoms began to improve five days after surgery and fully resolved by the eighth postoperative day without intervention. Femoral nerve palsy following epidural anesthesia is exceedingly rare and has not been…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVascular Procedures and Complications · Orthopaedic implants and arthroplasty · Anesthesia and Pain Management
