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Ophthalmic Anesthesia in the Contemporary ASC

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Title: Ophthalmic Anesthesia in the Contemporary ASC


1
Ophthalmic Anesthesia in the Contemporary ASC
  • Lawrence Rabinowitz, MD, MBA
  • Director of Anesthesia Mackool Eye Institute,
    River Drive Surgery Center
  • Clinical Assistant Professor CardioThoracic
    Anesthesiology NYU School of Medicine

2
Ask Why
  • No one right way to do any of this
  • Systems are multifactorial and one piece of a
    system that works extremely well does not
    necessarily fit into another system
  • Is it marketing or is it medicine, even if you
    are trying to marry them together dont forget
    which is which

3
Managing Expectations
  • Dont Overpromise!!!!
  • You wont feel a thing
  • Youll be asleep
  • It only takes five minutes
  • Youll be 20/20, reading and distance, with no
    astigmatism and never wear glasses

4
Outline
  • Clinical
  • Preoperative evaluation
  • Anesthetic, Efficiencies
  • Economic
  • ASA RVG
  • Graduating Resident Opportunities
  • Political
  • AANA, ASA
  • Employee, Independent Contractor

5
Preoperative Evaluation
  • Careful History and Physical
  • Not written by the surgeon
  • Any laboratory tests indicated by the HP and the
    severity of the surgery (Class A, B, C)
  • The Value of Routine Preoperative Medical Testing
    Before Cataract Surgery NEJM 2000342168-75
    Schein, Wilmer Eye Institute, Johns Hopkins
    University
  • More Preoperative Assessment by Physicians and
    Less by Laboratory Tests NEJM 2000342204-5
    Roizen, University of Chicago
  • Preoperative laboratory testing necessary or
    overkill? Can J Anesth 2004 516 Roizen
  • Cataracts vs. Trabs, Valves, Transplants (PK,
    DSEAK) or Retina (Retained lens material vs.
    buckle with membrane peel and gas fluid
    exchange)

6
Routine PreOp Tests
  • Roizen,M Preoperative Laboratory Testing
    necessary or overkill? Can J Anesth 2004 / 516 /
    ppR1-R6
  • Laboratory tests are not good screening devices
    for disease
  • Results are costly to pursue, add new risk for
    pt, increase medicolegal risk for MD, make ORs
    inefficient
  • More tests ordered more likely to have abnormal
    result
  • Specificity of 95, if 2 tests ordered for pt
    with no disease chance of both being normal is
    .95 x .95 .90
  • For 20 tests the chance that all will be normal
    is only 36
  • Asymptomatic pt lt40 yo routine CXR causes harm to
    3 patients and benefits only 0.8 patients per
    1000 CXRs

7
PreOperative Instructions
  • Take all your meds in the morning
  • From anesthesia standpoint we do not hold ASA,
    clopidogrel (plavix), coumadin
  • Presently do 25,000 cases per year 15,000 with
    a block and 10,000 topical. Incidence of
    significant peribulbar hemorrhage once or twice a
    year
  • Risks of stopping anticoagulation
  • Late Thrombosis of Drug-eluting Stents Presenting
    in the Perioperative Period Anesthesiology 2007
    1061057-9, de Souza, University of Virginia
  • Current ACC/AHA recommendations are 1 year of
    dual antiplatelet therapy for DES

8
Preoperative Instructions
  • Have a light breakfast and lunch on the day of
    surgery
  • Especially important for diabetics
  • Risk of aspiration only exists if you remove a
    patients gag reflex
  • Over 250,000 cases in the last 23 years without a
    single case of aspiration

9
Preoperative Drops
  • Neosynephrine 10 contains 100mg of phenylephrine
    per ml
  • One gtt is approximately 1/15th of one ml or 6mg
    of phenylephrine
  • In cardiac surgery I give 100 ucg IV (1/60th of
    one gtt of 10) for hypotension, septic patients
    on phenylephrine drips get 100ucg to 400 ucg per
    minute
  • New York State Guidelines on the Topical Use of
    Phenylephrine in the Operating Room,
    Anesthesiology Volume 92 (3) March 2000 pp
    859-864, Groudine
  • Hypertension and Pulmonary Edema Associated with
    Subconjunctival Phenylephrine in a 2 month old
    Child during Cataract Extraction, Anesthesiology
    Volume 88 (5) May 1998 p 1394-96, Greher
  • Adverse systemic effects from pledgets of topical
    ocular phenylephrine 10, American Journal of
    Ophthalmology 2002 Oct134 (4) 624-5, Fraunfelder

10
Normal LV and Mitral Function
11
Severe Hypertension
12
Aspects of Eye Anesthetic
  • Anxiolysis
  • Pain relief
  • Immobility
  • Patient, Globe, Lids
  • Stable IOP
  • Lid function
  • Hemodynamic, respiratory, metabolic stability

13
Anxiolysis
  • Talking to the patient
  • Treat the patient the way you want yourself or
    your family to be treated, dont over promise
  • Warm blanket
  • PO meds
  • Alprazolam (Xanax)
  • Sublingual meds
  • Midazolam (Versed)
  • IV meds
  • Midazolam (Versed), Propofol (Diprivan)

14
Pain Relief
  • Topical local anesthetics
  • Tetracaine, lidocaine
  • Drops or viscous
  • Intracameral local anesthetics
  • Preservative free lidocaine
  • IV drugs
  • Ketamine
  • Narcotics (fentanyl)
  • Injected local anesthetics
  • Retrobulbar (intraconal)
  • Peribulbar
  • Sub tenons

15
Immobility
  • Injected local anesthetics (globe)
  • Retrobulbar (intraconal)
  • Peribulbar
  • Sub tenons
  • Injected local anesthetics (lids)
  • Peribulbar
  • Nadbath
  • OBrien
  • Van Lindt
  • General anesthesia (patient)
  • Anesthesia machine, Malignant Hyperthermia cart

16
Stable IOP
  • Topical
  • Full function of the lids allows for possibility
    of significant increases in IOP, especially if
    the case is complicated and goes on much longer
    than anticipated
  • Block
  • Diminished muscle strength of orbicularis
    generally provides for stable IOP but is not a
    guarantee

17
Hemodynamic Stability
  • Heart Rate Control, Aggressive
  • ACC/AHA 2006 Guideline Update on PeriOperative
    Cardiovascular Evaluation for NonCardiac Surgery
    Focused Update on Perioperative B-Blocker
    Therapy, Anesthesia and Analgesia Volume 104, No.
    1, January 2007, Fleisher
  • Labetalol (Normodyne)
  • Metoprolol (Lopressor)
  • Esmolol (Brevibloc)
  • ICDs
  • Consensus from ACC would be to turn off the ICD
  • We have a separate informed consent explaining we
    believe it is safer to leave the ICD on and have
    done several thousand without having one
    discharge

18
Metabolic Stability
  • Take your insulin and eat on the day of surgery
  • Check your blood sugar and adjust your meds and
    food intake as needed
  • Non-aggressive in this setting with short term
    hyperglycemia, not looking for it
  • No evidence that short term hyperglycemia affects
    ocular wound complications?
  • Management of Hyperglycemia in the Hospital
    Setting, NEJM 35518 Nov 2006,1903-11, Inzucchi

19
Efficiencies Where you do the IV, Sedation,
/- Block
  • Preop Area
  • 1 or more chairs per OR
  • Time to establish some rapport
  • Can be 1 or more cases ahead
  • Easily 4 cases per room per hour, up to 6
  • Operating Room
  • 1 chair per OR
  • Less time to establish rapport, more rushed feel
    for patient
  • Easily 2 cases per room per hour, up to 4

20
Our Anesthetic
  • Preferably in Preop Area
  • In a comfortable Lumex chair
  • We do not use any stretchers
  • When in the OR on a chair that reclines to the OR
    bed

21
Our Anesthetic
  • Topical
  • no pre med in waiting area unless outrageously
    anxious
  • 22 g IV in preop and midazolam, ketamine,
    propofol
  • Topical and intracameral local
  • Walk to the OR walk out of the OR
  • Block
  • no pre med in waiting area unless outrageously
    anxious
  • 22 g IV in preop and midazolam, ketamine,
    propofol
  • Peribulbar block 3 5 cc for cataract
  • Walk to the OR walk out of the OR

22
Our Anesthetic
  • Topical
  • Surgeon preference
  • Patient preference
  • Aphakic refractive cases (ARTs)
  • Generally straightforward cataracts
  • Well dilated
  • Block
  • Surgeon preference
  • Patient preference
  • Complicated cases
  • IOL exchanges
  • Trabs
  • Valves
  • Retina

23
Hypothesis, Vitrectomy Rates
  • Base rate of vitrectomy was 1.5 with block and
    it increased to 2.25 with topical (50 increase
    in vitrectomy rate)
  • Test that hypothesis with 90 power at an alpha
    value of .05
  • Sample size (N) necessary to demonstrate this
    difference is 6872 cases in each arm, topical and
    block, or 13,744
  • Rollin Brant rollin_at_stat.ubc.ca
  • Base rate of vitrectomy was 2.0 with block and
    it increased to 3.0 with topical (50 increase
    in vitrectomy rates)
  • Test that hypothesis with 80 power at an alpha
    of .05
  • Sample size (N) necessary to demonstrate this
    difference is 3826 cases in each arm, topical and
    block, or 7652
  • Rollin Brant rollin_at_stat.ubc.ca

24
IV Access
  • Considered the standard of care
  • Allows you to respond to the needs of
  • Patient
  • anxiety, hypertension, tachycardia, arrhythmia
  • Surgeon
  • lack of patient cooperation
  • The patients who will tolerate the procedure
    without IV meds would certainly have had no
    problem with getting an IV, managing expectations
    is key
  • If you have a problem, an ophthalmologist will
    not carry standing as an expert in anesthesiology
    in a court of law
  • You will probably have issues being paid in the
    future if you dont place an IV

25
Equipment
  • MAC and Blocks
  • Pacing defibrillator for the OR
  • AED for the office
  • Ambu bag versus Ventilator by state requirements
  • General Anesthesia
  • Anesthesia machine
  • Stage 1 recovery
  • Malignant Hyperthermia cart and protocol
  • Ventilator

26
Economics of Eye Anesthesia
  • ASA Relative Value Guide
  • Medicare 4 starting units plus time, 1/3 unit per
    5 minutes, multiplied by local conversion factor,
    17 in NY/NJ
  • Private insurers may allow 6 units starting time
    and pay a full unit for any part of 15 mins, i.e.
    16 mins is 2 units, HMO payments in NY/NJ 35 -
    50 per unit, generally asked to participate with
    everyone
  • NYU Residents 2007
  • Generally offered at least 300k

27
Economics of Eye OR
  • 1 room OR
  • 3 cases per hour
  • 6 hours a day, 4 days a week, 50 weeks
  • 3600 cases per year
  • 4 million top line
  • _at_ 20 profit 800k profit

28
Political Anesthesia Provider
  • CRNA vs. MD
  • Employee vs. Independent Contractor

29
Political ASA vs. AANA
  • American Society of Anesthesiologists
  • American Association of Nurse Anesthetists
  • Independent Practice States
  • Iowa, Nebraska, Idaho, Minnesota, New Hampshire,
    New Mexico, Kansas, N. Dakota, Washington,
    Alaska, Oregon, Montana, S. Dakota, Wisconsin
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