Society for Pediatric Pain Medicine
Better Care for Children in Pain

The Society for Pediatric Pain Medicine (SPPM) aims to advance the quality of anesthesia care and the alleviation of pain-related conditions in children.

Member Menu

  • Member Login
  • Forgot Password?
  • Join
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
MAIN MENUMAIN MENU
  • Home
  • About
    • Vision Statement
    • Board of Directors
    • Committees
      • Advocacy Committee
      • Communications Committee
      • Education Committee
      • Finance & Membership Committee
      • Research Committee
    • Special Interests Groups (SIGs)
      • Interdisciplinary Chronic Pain Treatment (ICPT) SIG
      • Special Interest Group: Creating and Maintaining Pediatric Acute Pain Services
      • SPA-SPPM Integrative Medicine SIG
      • SPA-SPPM Ultrasound Regional Anesthesia and Point-of-Care Ultrasound SIG (Ult-RA POCUS SIG)
    • SPPM Bylaws
    • FAQs
    • Contact
  • Meetings
    • Upcoming Meetings
    • Past Meetings
    • Other Meetings
    • Exhibitor Information
  • Education
    • Questions of the Month
    • SPPM Visual Pearls
    • Poll of the Month Archives
    • Featured Lectures
    • Case Reports
    • Books for Clinicians
  • Membership
    • Member Benefits
    • Membership Classifications
    • New Member Spotlight
    • Renew Your Dues
    • Join Now
  • Resources
    • SPPM Young Investigator Research Award
    • SPPM Innovative Research Award
    • Latest News
    • Newsletters
    • COVID-19 Resources
    • Publications
    • Job Postings
    • Links of Interest
  • Patients & Families
    • Useful Links
    • Books for Patients and Families
    • Mobile Apps
    • FAQs
  • Trainees
    • Pediatric Chronic Pain Fellowship Programs
    • Pediatric Acute Pain/Regional Anesthesia Fellowship Programs

Question of the Month – April 2025

A 16‐year‐old patient undergoing an open laparotomy had a T12 epidural placed under standard sterile technique. Because the “loss‐of‐resistance” was not crisp and the resident expressed doubt about catheter placement. In addition to the usual epidural test dose of epinephrine, which of the following published methods can help confirm correct epidural catheter placement in pediatric patients?


Options:

A. Epidural Pressure Waveform Analysis

B. Electrical Stimulation (Tsui Test)

C. Fluoroscopic Guidance with Contrast Injection (Epidurography)

D. Ultrasound Confirmation

E. pH Testing of Aspirated Fluid

F. Combined Spinal-Epidural (CSE) Technique

Correct! Wrong!

Question of the Month - April 2025

Upcoming Meeting Information

SPPM 13th Annual Meeting
March 12, 2026
Sheraton Denver Downtown
Denver, CO

 

Join SPPM
Renew
Donate
Get Involved
Upcoming
Job Postings

Copyright © 2025 · Outreach Pro On Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in