BOFAS VTE Position Statement BOFAS VTE Position Statement Updated Statement June 2025 20 July 2025 Click here to access the newly updated BOFAS Position Statement for VTE Prophylaxis Read more
Registration Open for BOFAS 2025 (Nov) Registration Open for BOFAS 2025 (Nov) Click to Register Now! 25 June 2025 Read more
New Speciality Standards New Speciality Standards Management of End Stage Ankle Arthritis 05 April 2025 Click here to access the latest BOFAS-BOA Standards for management of End Stage Ankle Arthritis Read more
2Oct2025 BOFAS Principles Course - Dubai 02/10/2025 - 04/10/2025 Read more The aim is to give Overseas Trainee Orthopaedic Surgeons a solid grounding in the principles and the decision making in Foot & Ankle Surgery. There is an emphasis on clinical examination of cases, small group discussions and learning surgical approaches in the cadaver lab. This is the first course BOFAS is running in UAE and the aim is to expand the Foot and Ankle education and training in the Middle East and Gulf area. Venue - Le Meridien, Dubai, United Arab Emirates Documents to download ACv3BOFAS-Principles-Course-Programme-DXB(.pdf, 2.13 MB) - 469 download(s) Read more
20Oct2025 BOFAS Principles Course Taunton 20/10/2025 - 21/10/2025 Read more These courses are aimed at Higher Surgical Trainees / ST3 onwards and are designed to teach the core of Foot and Ankle surgery in an informal and interactive environment. The emphasis is on clinical examination cases, discussion groups and typical day-to-day clinic scenarios. Although not an exam preparation course, content is taught to the standard expected in the FRCS(Tr & Orth) exam; that of a day-one non-specialist orthopaedic consultant. Applications will open on 1st September 2023. Venue - Taunton (TBC) Documents to download BOFAS-Course-Programme--Taunton-2025(.docx, 31.88 KB) - 738 download(s) Read more
Togay Koç / 27 June 2022 / Categories: Abstracts, 2013, Poster Pilot study of local anaesthetic peripheral nerve block in forefoot day case surgery: does it work better when administered before the start of the surgical procedure? S. Chandrashekar, A. Watson Introduction: The success of Day-case forefoot surgery depends on good post-operative pain relief to ensure that patients are confidently discharged home. We routinely perform all forefoot surgery as daycase procedure with pre-operative regional local anesthetic block with 0.5% Levo-Bupivacaine involving the superficial and deep peroneal, sural, posterior tibial and saphenous nerves. We hypothesized that pre-operative regional block has similar effectiveness if not better, compared to block administered after the surgical incision has been sutured. Methods: 42 consecutive patients undergoing day-case bony forefoot surgery were recruited and randomized to receive regional local anesthetic block performed by senior author, with 20mls of 0.5% Levo-bupivacaine either before the surgical incision or after the surgical incision has been sutured. Patient and the member collecting data were blinded to the allocation. Intra-operative and post-operative analgesia was standardized in consultation with the anesthetists and all patients received general anesthesia.Post-operative visual analogue pain scores at 2 and 6 hours were collected. Data collection also included time at which they required rescue analgesia and the amount of analgesia used in the first 24 hrs. Results: 3 patients required overnight hospital stay due to social reasons. Mean age of patients undergoing surgery was 59±1 years. Mean surgery time was 49±1 minutes in Post-operative group & 39±1 minutes in pre-operative group. Average of the sum of the pain scores at 2&6 hours were 2 and 1 respectively. Mean time to rescue analgesia was 9±1 hours in the post-operative group and 11±1 hours in the pre-operative group. The amount of non-opiate analgesia used after discharge was more in the post-operative group. Conclusion: Pilot study power calculation suggests a sample size of at-least 67 patients to prove a statistical significance between groups. Results suggest Pre-operative regional anaesthetic block is better for longer pain relief in the initial 24 hours. Print 483 Tags: Peri-operative Care