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Obstructive sleep apnea and anesthesia

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... administration supine posture = aggravate ... Supine RDI (respiratory disturbance index ) AHI ... Avoid supine position during the recovery. Monitoring ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Obstructive sleep apnea and anesthesia


1
Obstructive sleep apnea and anesthesia
  • Practice guidelines for the perioperative
    management of patients with obstructive sleep
    apnea. Anesthesiology 2006 1041081-93
  • Risks of general anaesthesia in people with
    obstructive sleep apnoea. BMJ 2004 329 955-959
  • Unrecognized Sleep Apnea in the Surgical Patient.
    Chest 2006129198-205

Speaker R2 ??? Supervisor Dr.??? 20070620
2
Introduction
Recovery function
? Brain
3
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4
Definition of OSA (obstructive sleep apnea)
  • Apnea
  • A pause of ?10 sec. in breathing during sleep
    despite continuing ventilatory effort
  • Hypopnea
  • gt 50 diminishing of airflow or oxygen
    desaturations ? 3 for ?10 sec.
  • Obstructive sleep apnea
  • AHI (apneic-hypopneic index) by polysomnography
  • ? 5 apneas/hr
  • ? 15 hypopneas/hr

5
  • Predisposing factors
  • Obesity (BMI gt30)
  • A large neck circumference (gt44 cm)
  • Age
  • Male
  • Use of alcohol

6
How does perioperative state impact sleep?
  • Both anesthesia and surgery affect the
    architecture of sleep
  • Sleep deprivation and fragmentation
  • REM sleep is usually absent on the 1st
    postoperative night
  • REM associated hypoxemia in the late
    postoperative period
  • Apneas desaturations
  • Surgical stress gtgt anesthesia
  • Location type of the surgery
  • Morphine

7
Summery
  • Postoperative REM sleep rebound opioid
    administration supine posture gt aggravate
    sleep-disordered breathing
  • Sedatives analgesics residual effects of
    anesthetics
  • ?pharyngeal tone
  • ?ventilatory and arousal responses to hypoxia,
    hypercarbia, and obstruction

8
How can OSA affect perioperative outcomes?
  • REM sleep gt hypoxemia gt sympathetic avtivation
  • Hemodynamic instability
  • Attenuated responses to vasopressors
  • Myocardial ischemia and infarction
  • Stroke
  • Mental confusion
  • Wound breakdown

9
  • Sleep deprivation
  • A lower threshold for upper airway collapse
  • ?responsiveness to hypercapnia and hypoxia
  • Postoperative delirium
  • Cardiac arrhythmias
  • Sinus bradytachyarrhythmia
  • VPCs
  • Sinus pauses of 2-13 sec.
  • Second-degree AV block
  • Atrial fibrillation

10
What is the most reliable tool to assess OSA in
the perioperative setting?
  • Preoperative visit
  • Hx, S/S, PE, laboratory studies
  • Intraoperative period
  • Problems with the maintenance of the airway
  • Difficult to intubate
  • Snoring having obstruction observed
    postoperatively.
  • An airway obstruction that is out of proportion
    to the apparent degree of sedation
  • A pronounced tendency for upper airway
    obstruction during anesthesia or recovery from it

11
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12
Staging system of Mallampati
13
  • The reliable tools
  • Polysomnography gold standard
  • Preoperative overnight oximetry
  • SARs (significant abnormalities of respiration)
  • SpO2 ? 4 ? 5 times in 1 h
  • Supine RDI (respiratory disturbance index )
  • AHI
  • Number of apneas / hypopneas per hour total sleep
    time
  • RERA (respiratory effort-related arousal)
  • ?respiratory effort for ? 10 s leading to an
    arousal from sleep

14
Preoperative preparation
  • Preoperative weight loss
  • Preoperative use of mandibular advancement or
    oral appliances
  • Preoperative mechanical ventilation assist
  • CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure)
  • NIPPV (noninvasive positive-pressure ventilation)
  • BiPAP (bilevel positive airway pressure)
  • Preoperative medications

15
Without CPAP
With CPAP
16
Intraoperative management
17
  • Choice of anesthetic technique
  • Peripheral surgery
  • Local anesthesia
  • Peripheral nerve block
  • Regional anesthesia
  • Intraabdominal surgery equivocal

18
  • Airway management
  • A secured airway
  • Deep sedation for superficial procedures
  • Moderate or deep sedation for procedures
    involving the upper airway
  • Extubated
  • Fully awake
  • Full reversal of neruromuscular blockade
  • Semiupright position
  • Patient monitoring
  • Respiratory CO2

19
Postoperative management
  • Risk factors for respiratory depression
  • Systemic and neuraxial administration of opioids
  • Administration of sedatives
  • Site and invasiveness of surgical procedure
  • Underlying severity of OSA
  • Exacerbation of respiratory depression may occur
    on the 3rd or 4th postoperative day as REM
    rebound occurs

20
Postoperative analgesia
  • Regional analgesic techniques rather than
    systemic opioids reduce the likelihood of adverse
    outcomes
  • Exclusion of opioids from neuraxial postoperative
    analgesia reduces risks as compared with
    neuraxial techniques which include opioids
  • Adding a basal infusion to PCA results in an
    increased incidence of hypoxemia

21
Oxygenation
  • The use of postextubation supplemental oxygen to
    improve the oxygen saturation levels
  • Increase the duration of apneic episodes
  • May hinder detection of atelectasis, transient
    apnea, and hypoventilation by pulse oximetry
  • CPAP or NIPPV, with or without supplemental
    oxygen, should continuously administered when
    feasible

22
Patient positioning
  • Avoid supine position during the recovery

23
Monitoring
  • Pulse oximetry should be applied until room air
    oxygen saturation remains gt 90 during sleep
  • Continuous monitoring should be maintained as
    long as patients remain at increased risk

24
Thank you for your attention!!
25
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