Regional Block

Popliteal Sciatic Nerve Block

The popliteal sciatic nerve block targets the sciatic nerve in the popliteal fossa, approximately 5–7 cm proximal to the popliteal skin crease. The sciatic nerve (L4–S3) divides into the tibial nerve (medial) and common peroneal nerve (lateral) at or above the popliteal crease. At the level of the popliteal fossa, both nerves are still enclosed within a common epineural sheath. The injection above the bifurcation within this common sheath produces faster and more complete block than injecting below the bifurcation. The sciatic nerve is located posteromedial to the biceps femoris tendon and deep to the biceps femoris and semitendinosus muscles in the popliteal fossa.

Onset20–30 minutes for complete block
Duration14–24 hours with bupivacaine/levobupivacaine
CoverageTibial nerve: plantar foot, heel, posterior leg
Clinical Note
DO NOT perform popliteal sciatic block if compartment syndrome is suspected. Motor and sensory block will prevent monitoring of the 6 Ps (pain, pallor, pulselessness, paraesthesia, paralysis, pressure). This can lead to delayed diagnosis and catastrophic limb loss.

Indications

  • Foot and ankle surgery (ankle arthroscopy, calcaneal fracture, Achilles repair)
  • Below-knee amputation analgesia
  • Ankle fracture reduction and fixation
  • Total ankle arthroplasty
  • Foot debridement and diabetic foot surgery
  • Calcaneus fractures
  • Hindfoot procedures
  • Acute lower leg compartment syndrome assessment (Note: controversial — consult senior; regional blocks may mask early compartment syndrome)
  • Tourniquet analgesia in below-knee surgery (combined with saphenous/femoral block)

Contraindications

  • Patient refusal
  • Infection or abscess in popliteal fossa
  • Significant coagulopathy (risk-benefit)
  • Known allergy to local anaesthetic
  • Suspected compartment syndrome of the lower leg (relative/absolute — blocks may mask deterioration)
  • Pre-existing sciatic neuropathy (relative)

Technique

  1. Patient positioned prone (preferred) or lateral decubitus with operative limb uppermost
  2. High-frequency linear probe placed transversely in popliteal fossa
  3. Identify popliteal artery (pulsatile); vein lies superficial; sciatic nerve lies posterior-lateral to vessels
  4. Scan proximally to identify the point of bifurcation of tibial and common peroneal nerves
  5. Target 2–5 cm proximal to bifurcation (within common epineural sheath)
  6. In-plane needle approach from lateral (preferred) or out-of-plane
  7. Advance needle to just outside epineural sheath (perineural)
  8. Inject 20–30 mL LA with Doppler confirmation of no intravascular injection
  9. Visualise circumferential spread around sciatic nerve (donut sign)
  10. LATERAL APPROACH: patient supine, probe on lateral thigh — accesses nerve from lateral side without repositioning

Drug Doses

AgentConcentrationVolumeTotal DoseNotes
Ropivacaine0.5%20–30 mL100–150 mgMost commonly used. Good sensory block. Max 3 mg/kg. Duration 12–18h.
Bupivacaine0.375–0.5%20–30 mL75–150 mgLong duration. Max 2 mg/kg (not >150 mg). Excellent for overnight analgesia.
Levobupivacaine0.375–0.5%20–30 mL75–100 mgPreferred in patients with cardiac history. Max 2 mg/kg.
Combined with Saphenous BlockAdd ropivacaine 0.5% 5 mL5 mL additionalCalculate cumulative doseComplete foot/ankle block requires adding saphenous nerve block (femoral nerve territory, medial lower leg). Cumulative dose must not exceed maximum safe doses.
Onset
20–30 minutes for complete block; common peroneal component often faster than tibial
Duration
14–24 hours with bupivacaine/levobupivacaine; 12–18 hours with ropivacaine

Complications

Foot Drop (Common Peroneal Nerve Palsy)
Expected motor block: plantar/dorsiflexion weakness. Foot drop from injury to common peroneal nerve is rare but serious. Ensure padding and splinting to prevent pressure injury to foot. Educate patient.
LAST
Large volumes used (20–30 mL). Popliteal fossa is moderately vascular. Aspirate before each injection increment. Popliteal vein and artery identified by Doppler before injection.
Nerve Injury
Intraneural injection is most significant complication. Do not inject against resistance. Symptoms: paresthesia on injection (stop immediately).
Vascular Puncture / Haematoma
Popliteal vessels lie deep to the nerve. Ultrasound with Doppler reduces risk. Apply compression if puncture occurs.
Incomplete Block
Failure to inject within common sheath (below bifurcation) is the most common cause. Saphenous nerve (medial lower leg) requires separate block for complete foot/ankle anaesthesia.

Landmarks

  • Popliteal crease (skin fold at back of knee)
  • Biceps femoris tendon (lateral border of popliteal fossa)
  • Semimembranosus/semitendinosus tendons (medial border)
  • Popliteal artery and vein (deep to nerve)
  • Target: sciatic nerve 5–7 cm above popliteal crease

Sensory Coverage

Tibial nerve: plantar foot, heel, posterior leg. Common peroneal nerve: dorsum of foot, anterior lower leg, lateral lower leg (superficial peroneal). Does NOT cover: medial lower leg/medial foot (saphenous nerve — femoral territory). For complete foot anaesthesia: popliteal sciatic + saphenous nerve block.

Clinical Pearls

Identify bifurcation first, then inject 3–5 cm proximal for most reliable complete block
Lateral approach allows block to be performed without repositioning supine patient
Continuous catheter in popliteal fossa provides excellent post-operative analgesia for major foot surgery
Document: patient must not weight-bear with operative limb due to motor block
Saphenous nerve block is required if medial leg/foot territory must be covered
Avoid in suspected compartment syndrome — motor/sensory block will mask signs

Background & Evidence

The popliteal sciatic nerve block is the workhorse block for foot and ankle surgery, providing excellent analgesia below the knee (sciatic territory). It is technically reliable with ultrasound guidance. The key anatomical distinction is the bifurcation point — injection within the common epineural sheath proximal to bifurcation gives the most rapid and complete block. Combined with a saphenous nerve block, it provides complete foot and ankle anaesthesia.

Back to all blocks