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ANAESTHESIA FOR RENAL TRANSPLANTATION

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Title: ANAESTHESIA FOR RENAL TRANSPLANTATION


1
ANAESTHESIA FOR RENAL TRANSPLANTATION
  • Dr.M.Kannan MD DA
  • Professor and HOD of Anaesthesiology
  • Tirunelveli Medical College

2
Demand-supply imbalance
3000
300 per million
1800 per year in Tamilnadu
3
Associated co-morbid conditions
  • Coronary artery disease
  • Congestive cardiac failure
  • Systemic Hypertension
  • Diabetes Mellitus

4
Associated co-morbid conditions
  • Coronary artery disease
  • Incidence 17-34
  • Coronary angiography re-vascularisation
  • Irreversible LV dysfunction with very low cardiac
    output

contraindication
5
Associated co-morbid conditions
  • Congestive cardiac failure
  • CCF is present before dialysis
  • CCF Associated with CRF
  • IHD Hypoalbuminemia
  • Old age Uremic cardiomyopathy
  • Diabetes
  • Anaemia AV-fistula

Independent prognostic Motality
6
Associated co-morbid conditions
  • Systemic Hypertension
  • 70 of ESRD patients
  • ACE-inhibitors
  • Calcium channel blockers
  • Beta-blockers
  • Diuretics

Discontinued before surgery serum.K level
monitored
Continued peri-operatively
7
LaryngoscopyIntubation
  • Exaggerated stress response
  • Opioids
  • beta-blockers
  • IV Lignocaine

8
Associated co-morbid conditions
  • Diabetes Mellitus
  • Cardiac complications gets doubled
  • Revised cardiac risk index
  • 1.High-risk surgical procedure.
  • 2.h/o IHD(excluding previous coronary
    re-vascularization)
  • 3.Heart failure
  • 4.h/o stroke or transient ischemic attacks
  • 5.Pre-operative insulin therapy
  • 6.Pre-operative creatinine levels higher than 2
    mg/dl.

9
Patho-physiological consequences of ESRD
  • Anaemia
  • -Transfusion
  • Uremic Coagulopathy
  • Uremic Cardiomyopathy
  • Se.K acid-base status
  • Delayed gastric emptying

Erythropoietin Normocytic normochromic anaemia
Hypertension, CVA, Thrombosis of fistulas
Sensitization of the recipient
Abnormal platelet function Factor 8
Pre-operative dialysis Toxins l-
guanidinosuccinate,phenol Phenolic acid
Hyperkalemia Acidosis Treatment-Dialysis Delays
recovery -Anaesthesia
10
Pre-operative dialysis
  • Optimize fluid and electrolyte balance
  • Correct hemostatic abnormalities
  • Post dialysis weight loss of gt2 kg
  • -Indicate intra-vascular volume depletion
  • -Thromboplastin time is checked for
    residual heparin
  • -Hepatitis can be endemic

11
Pre-operative optimazisation
  • Adequate BP control
  • Adequate control of blood glucose
  • Correction of se.K levels.
  • Correction of anaemia
  • Correction of coagulopathy

12
Anaesthetic Agents
  • Thiopental
  • Propofol
  • Isoflurane
  • -peripheral vaso-dilatation
  • -minimal cardio-depressive effects
    -preservation of RBF
  • -low renal toxicity
  • Desflurane

13
Sevoflurane
  • Fluoride
  • CompoundA
  • Fresh gas flow rates gt4 L/min

14
Opioids
  • Morphine
  • Pethedine
  • Fentanyl, sufentanil, alfentanil, remifentanyl
  • Reduced clearance
  • Accumulation of active metabolites
  • Safer
  • Metabolites are not potent,

15
Muscle Relaxant
  • -Succinyl choline ? -not contra-indicated in
  • pts. with ESRD

0.6 m eq/l can be tolerated without significant
cardiac risk
16
Muscle Relaxant
  • Pancuronium
  • Vecuronium
  • Atracurium
  • Rocuronium
  • Less desirable in uremia.
  • Slight in duration
  • Hoffmann elimination
  • Clearance is unaffected in renal failure.

Elimination half lives of anti-cholinesterases
are prolonged
17
Monitors
  • 5-lead ECG.
  • Arterial BP
  • SpO2
  • EtCo2
  • Temperature .
  • Urine output

18
Special Monitors
Hypotension Hypovolemia or Myocardial
contractility.
Sonicated albumin Predict renal viability
Guide pharmacological interventions.
  • gt20/15
  • Poorly controlled hypertension
  • 2. CAD with LV dysfunction
  • 3 .Valvular heart disease
  • 4.COPD when severe.
  • CVP monitoring
  • Direct arterial pressure monitoring
  • Pulmonary artery occlusion pressure
  • TEE
  • Contrast-Enhanced Perfusion USG

Systolic BP variation correlates well with LV
end-diastolic volume
19
Factors affecting kidney viability
  • Management of the kidney donor(living or
    cadaveric).
  • How well the harvested organ is preserved.
  • Peri-operative management of the kidney recipient.

20
Anaesthetic considerations during donor
nephrectomy
  • Venous return due to the kidney
  • -adequate hydration
  • V/Q mismatching due to positioning
  • Mannitol and IV heparin (3000-5000) units before
    cross-clamping the renal vessels.
  • Administration of protamine to normalize
    coagulation

21
Management of the Brain dead Kidney donor
  • Selection -Stable hemodynamics
  • Adequate respiratory
    parameters
  • Absolute contra-indications
  • Prolonged hypotension Hypothermia
  • Collagen vascular diseases
  • Congenital or acquired metabolic disorders
  • Malignancies, Generalized viral or
    bacterial infections
  • DIC Hep B, HIV.

22
Relative contra-indications
  • Age above 70 years
  • Diabetes mellitus
  • High serum creatinine before organ harvesting
  • Excessive pre-terminal use of vaso-pressors.

23
Guidelines for intra-op management of the brain
dead
  • A systolic BP gt100 mm Hg
  • PaO2 gt100 mm Hg
  • Urine output gt100 ml/hr
  • Hemoglobin concentration gt100 g/l
  • Central venous pressure between 5 and 10 mm Hg

The rule of 100 is followed
24
Guidelines for intra-op management of the brain
dead
  • Vasodilators -Phentolamine
  • Hypotension- Fluid administration
    Pharmacological support
  • Bradycardia - Iso-prenaline (a direct acting
    chronotrope) and not atropine.

25
Anaesthetic management of kidney recipients
  • General Anaesthesia with controlled ventilation
  • -Good hemodynamic stability
  • -Better patient comfort.
  • Regional Anaesthesia
  • Dis-advantages
  • Systemic blood pressure -viability of the
    kidney donated.
  • Large volumes of IVF precipitate acute LVF.
  • Advantages
  • It is cost-effective
  • Complete abolition of stress response
  • Less exposure to anaesthetic drugs

26
Anaesthetic considerations in the recipient
  • Positioning Care of the AV Fistula
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