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ANESTHESIA PART I

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Title: ANESTHESIA Part I Author: Robin Keith Last modified by: Robin Keith Created Date: 11/3/2002 5:12:24 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ANESTHESIA PART I


1
ANESTHESIA PART I
2
Anesthesia
  • Types of
  • Concepts
  • Administration Selection

3
Anesthesia
  • Definition Lack of Sensation
  • Describes a process that is used to alleviate
    pain and suffering during a surgical procedure

4
Optimal Anesthesia
  • Achieved If All Of The Following Are Met
  • Hypnosis
  • Anesthesia
  • Amnesia
  • Muscle Relaxation
  • Optimal Positioning of Patient
  • Homeostasis of Vital Functions

5
Hypnosis
  • Altered state of consciousness related to how the
    patient perceives his or her environment
    (surgical) and procedure (surgical)
  • Induce sleep
  • Can be light to fully unconscious

6
Anesthesia
  • Lack of sensation
  • Allows for pain-free surgery
  • Ranges from topical, local, regional and general
    (systemic) agents

7
Amnesia
  • Lack of recall of surgical events
  • Allows for more cooperative relaxed patient

8
Muscle Relaxation
  • Combined with inhalation (gases) agents to
    produce muscle relaxation to total paralysis
  • Allows for endotracheal intubation
  • Facilitates exposure of tissues and organs as
    muscles are in a relaxed state

9
Patient Positioning
  • Allows for surgical site exposure/access
  • Allows for monitoring of the surgical patient
  • Allows/provides physiological homeostasis

10
Homeostasis of Vital Functions
  • Maintenance of the patients physiological status
    until surgical intervention is complete
  • Most dangerous part of surgery is anesthesia
  • Are inducing a state close to death without
    crossing that line

11
Methods of Administration
  • Determining the Right Anesthetic
  • Patients age, weight, and build
  • Emotional, psychological and physical needs
  • Type of operation and duration of operation
  • Lab and X-ray findings
  • Pre-existing illnesses or diseases
  • Medications on
  • Allergies
  • History of drug or alcohol abuse
  • Time since last ingested food, particularly with
    emergencies

12
American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA)
  • Based on the evaluation/assessment done
    preoperatively, the patient is assigned a Class
    1 through 6. This determines what kind of risk
    is involved for the patient for the surgical
    procedure about to be performed.
  • Class 1- Patient has no previous/current
    physical or mental medical history

13
  • Class 2- Mild to moderate disease
  • present (controlled HTN, asthma,
  • controlled diabetes, mildly obese,
  • anemic, tobacco use) that does not interfere
    with ADLs
  • Age less than 1 year or greater
  • than 70 years old

14
  • Class 3- severe disease present
  • (controlled angina, has had a myocardial
    infarction, HTN that is not controlled,
    respiratory disease that is causing difficulties
    presently, greatly obese) that interfere with ADLs

15
  • Class 4- severe disease (s) present that are
    life-threatening (unstable angina, CHF,
    respiratory disease that is
  • debilitating, liver failure, kidney failure,
  • myocardial infarction in progress or in
  • the last 24 hours)

16
  • Class 5- Has little chance of survival, but
    is operated on as a last ditch effort or at the
    request of family members

17
  • Class 6- Is brain dead/life support is
  • being provided
  • This is an organ harvest or
  • procurement

18
  • (E) Emergency Modifier- an E is added
  • to the Class in cases of emergency
  • surgery

19
Goal of Anesthesia
  • Patient safety
  • Optimal results

20
Anesthetic Agents
  • 2 types
  • 1. General
  • Focus on altering state of
  • consciousness, awareness and pain
  • perception
  • 2. Nerve Conduction Blockade
  • Focus on preventing sensory nerve impulse
  • transmission

21
General Anesthesia
  • Combined to deliver Balanced Anesthesia
  • Inhalation agents
  • Intravenous agents
  • Less Common
  • Intramuscular agents
  • Instillation

22
Components of General Anesthesia
  • Amnesia
  • Analgesia
  • Anesthesia
  • Muscle Relaxation
  • Together provide Balanced Anesthesia

23
Stages of General Anesthesia
  • I. Amnesia stage is lightest stage that
    begins with administration of agent ends with
    loss of consciousness
  • Good stage for MAC
  • II. Excitement or Delirium stage from loss of
    consciousness to loss of eyelid reflex and
    regular breathing
  • Patient movements are uninhibited
  • Might see vomiting, laryngospasm, hypertension,
    tachycardia
  • Rarely seen except in children due to drugs that
    are available now to carry patients straight to
    stage III
  • III. Surgical anesthesia stage from regular
    breathing and loss of eyelid reflex to cessation
    of breathing
  • Patient unresponsive and hearing is last to go
  • IV. Overdose stage dilated nonreactive pupils,
    cessation of breathing, hypotension can quickly
    lead to circulatory arrest if uncorrected
  • Autonomic response is totally blocked to all
    stimuli

24
Phases of Anesthesia
  1. Preinduction begins with premed administered and
    ends when anesthesia induction begins in OR
  2. Induction from consciousness to unconsciousness
  3. Maintenance surgery takes place during this
    requires maintenance of physiological function by
    anesthetist
  4. Emergence as surgery is completed (start to wake
    up), restoration of gag reflex, extubation
  5. Recovery time during when patient returns to full
    consciousness begins in OR and carries into stay
    in PACU and beginning healing stages

25
Advantages verses Disadvantages
26
General Anesthesia
  • Inhalation Agents
  • Nitrous Oxide (N²O)
  • Ethrane (Enflurane)
  • Forane (Isoflurane)
  • Halothane (Fluothane)
  • Sevoflurane (Sevoflurane)
  • Suprane (Desflurane)

27
General Anesthesia
  • Intravenous Agents
  • 1. Barbiturates
  • Short acting
  • Anesthesia
  • Not analgesic
  • Pentothal (thiopental)
  • Brevital (Methohexital)

28
General Anesthesia
  • Benzodiazepines
  • Sedative and amnesiac effects
  • Versed (Midazolam)
  • Valium (Diazepam)
  • Ativan (Lorazepam)

29
General Anesthesia
  • Individual Agent
  • Propofol (Diprivan)
  • Sedative/Hypnotic
  • Anesthetic
  • Amnesiac
  • No Analgesia
  • No Muscle Relaxation

30
General Anesthesia
  • Narcotics
  • Maintenance of general anesthesia
  • Anesthetic
  • Sublimaze (Fentanyl)
  • Alfenta (Alfentanil)
  • Sufenta (Sufentanil)
  • Morphine (Morphine Sulfate)

31
General Anesthesia
  • Muscle Relaxants (neuromuscular blocking agents)
  • To receive endotracheal intubation, patient must
    be paralyzed or have relaxed muscles
  • a. Depolarizing Agents Initiate
  • contractions called fasciculation
  • example Succinylcholine (Anectine)
  • b. Nondepolarizing Agents Prevent
  • contractions
  • examples Curare, Pavulon, Norcuron

32
Nerve Conduction Blockade
  • Includes
  • Topical anesthesia
  • Local anesthesia
  • Regional anesthesia
  • Spinal (intrathecal) block
  • Epidural block
  • Caudal block
  • Nerve plexus block

33
Topical Anesthesia
  • Used on mucous membranes upper aerodigestive
    tract, urethra, rectum, and skin
  • Cryoanesthesia reduces nerve conduction by
    localized freezing with a probe connected to a
    cryoprecipitate unit that uses nitrogen
  • Cryoanesthesia can also be performed with ice
  • Lidocaine jelly
  • Cocaine (topical only!) Most common use sinus
    surgery

34
Local Anesthetics
  • Immediate surgical site anesthesia
  • Affects small circumscribed area
  • Can be injected or applied topically
  • Lidocaine (Xylocaine)
  • Bupivicaine (Marcaine, Sensorcaine)
  • Procaine (Novocain)
  • Tetracaine (Pontocaine)
  • Mepivacaine (Carbocaine)
  • Hyaluronidase (Wydase) facilitator/enhancer of
    above medications effects
  • Epinephrine (Adrenalin) additive to above for
    vasoconstrictive properties

35
Local Anesthesia with MAC
  • Combination of nerve conduction blockade on
    topical or local level with supplementation by
    the anesthesia provider with analgesics,
    sedative-hypnotics, or amnestics

36
Regional Anesthetics
  • Injected along a major nerve tract
  • Nerve Plexus Block or Field Block
  • Bier Block
  • Spinal
  • Epidural
  • Caudal Block

37
Nerve Plexus Block
  • Anesthetic injected into major nerve plexus or
    the base of a structure
  • Result is anesthesia of tissue innervated by that
    plexus
  • Used in dental and extremities
  • Examples axillary, wrist, ankle, cervical plexus
    (CAE)

38
Bier Block
  • Anesthetic injected to an extremity into a vein
    below the level of a tourniquet
  • For arm/wrist/hand surgery that will last less
    than 1 hour
  • Blood exsanguinated from extremity with an
    esmark, tourniquet is inflated, anesthetic given
  • Tourniquet prevents anesthetic agent from
    circulating above it
  • Tourniquet will be released slowly to allow for
    gradual circulation of the agent to prevent
    cardiovascular or CNS effects

39
Spinal Block
  • Injected into CSF in the subarachnoid space
    between L-3 and L-5 vertebrae
  • For lower body procedures
  • Onset 3-5 minutes
  • Duration 1 ½ hours
  • Tetracaine most common agent used
  • Lidocaine and Procaine others used
  • Epinephrine can prolong effect
  • Never put patient in Trendelenburg position with
    spinal anesthesia

40
Spinal Block
  • Disadvantages
  • Hypotension
  • Nausea and vomiting
  • One time dose means cannot adjust
  • Temporary or permanent paralysis

41
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42
Spinal Block
  • Advantages
  • Conscious patient
  • No respiratory irritation
  • Bowel contraction enhances abdominal visibility
  • Muscle relaxant effects allow easy abdominal wall
    retraction

43
Epidural Block
  • Injected outside of the dura in the epidural
    space that contains the fatty tissue
  • Injected T-4 vertebral area and down
  • Lower limb perineal surgeries and obstetrics
  • Thoracic surgeries will be placed for post-op
    pain management
  • Can be single dose or a catheter can be inserted
    to allow for redosing

44
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45
Caudal Block
  • Type of Epidural being replaced by the Epidural
    Block
  • Only difference is placement in the epidural
    space of the sacral canal
  • Primarily seen with mothers in labor

46
Summary
  • Anesthesia Types
  • Anesthesia Administration Selection
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