Title: Monitoring During Thoracic Anesthesia
1Monitoring During Thoracic Anesthesia
2Outline
- Introduction
- Physiological Aspects
- Monitoring Requirements
3 Introduction
4Thoracic anesthesia is challenging
Patient
Procedure
5 Physiological Aspects
6Principles of Ventilation and Perfusion
- V" - ventilation - the air which reaches the
lungs - "Q" - perfusion - the blood which reaches the
lungs - Normal V is 4 L of air per minute.
- Normal Q is 5L of blood per minute.
- So Normal V/Q ratio is 4/5 or 0.8.
- When the V/Q is higher than 0.8, it means
ventilation exceeds perfusion. - When the V/Q is lt 0.8, there is a VQ mismatch
caused by poor ventilation
7Principles of Ventilation and Perfusion
- An area with no ventilation (and thus a V/Q of
zero) is termed "shunt." - An area with no perfusion (and thus a V/Q of
infinity) is termed dead space
8Lung Compliance
- A change in volume divided by a change in
transpulmonary pressure. - (CL ?V / ?PL)
- A typical value of compliance is 200 ml/cm H20
9 Monitoring
10Lateral Decubitus Position
- Optimal access for most operations
- Alter the normal pulmonary ventilation/perfusion
relationships accentuated by - Induction of anesthesia Initiation of
mech.ventilation - Opening the chest Surgical
retractions
11Principles of Ventilation and Perfusion
Perfusion
Ventilation
Pulmonary blood flow distribution relative to the
alveolar pressure
12Lateral Decubitus Position
The dependent lung is better Ventilated than
the Nondependent lung, ?V/? Q still is well
matched.
Patient awake spontaneously breathing
13Lateral Decubitus Position
14Lateral Decubitus Position
15Patient anesthetized ,mechanically ventilated
,chest open
16One Lung Ventilation
- The principle physiologic change of OLV is the
redistribution of lung perfusion between the
ventilated (dependent) and blocked (nondependent)
lung - Many factors contribute to the lung perfusion,
the major determinants of them are hypoxic
pulmonary vasoconstriction, HPV and gravity.
17Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction
- HPV is a widely conserved, homeostatic, vasomotor
response of precapillary smooth muscle in the PAs
to alveolar hypoxia. HPV mediates ?V/?Q matching
and, by reducing shunt fraction, optimizes
systemic pO2.
18One Lung Ventilation
- Reduces the surface area available for gas
exchange - Reduced arterial oxygen tension
Maintaining oxygenation and elimination of
carbon dioxide is the greatest challenge
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20Monitoring
- Use of Monitoring to Detect and Diagnose
Intraoperative Events - Respiration
- Oxygenation
- Ventilation
- Cardiovascular function
21Respiration
22Oxygenation
23Ventilation
24Cardiovascular function
- Electrocardiography
- Arrhythmia, ischemia
- Intraarterial catheter
- Hypotension or hypertension
- Arterial compression
25Cardiovascular function
- Pulmonary artery catheter
- Pulmonary hypertension, filling pressures,
assess - cardiac performance
- SvO2
- Adequacy of cardiac output
26Cardiovascular function
- Transesophageal Echocardiography
- Ischemia, volume status, right ventricular
dysfunction
27Tiered Monitoring System of Thoracic Surgery
Failure to check the equipment properly before
induction of anesthesia is responsible for 22
of the critical incidents that occur during
anesthesia
28Tiered Monitoring System of Thoracic Surgery
- Healthy patients
no special intraopertive conditions - Sick patients
special intraopertive conditions -
Tier I
Procedure
Patient
29Tier I Essential monitors used in all patients
30Fibro-optic Bronchoscope
31Tiered Monitoring System of Thoracic Surgery
- Healthy patients
no special intraopertive conditions - Sick patients
special intraopertive conditions -
Tier II
Procedure
Patient
32Tiered Monitoring System of Thoracic Surgery
- Healthy patients
no special intraopertive conditions - Sick patients
special intraopertive conditions -
Tier II
Procedure
Patient
33Tier II Special intermittent or continuous
monitoring needs
34Spirometry
- Spirometry is a non-invasive monitor device which
measures volume, pressure and flow in the airway. - These measurements may be used to construct
- a pressure-volume curve (PV) and
- a flow-volume curve (FV).
- The constructed curves will give important
information about the peri-operative respiratory
function.
35Tiered Monitoring System of Thoracic Surgery
- Healthy patients
no special intraopertive conditions - Sick patients
special intraopertive conditions -
Tier III
Procedure
Patient
36Tier III Advanced monitoring
37Special considerations for PA catheter
38Special considerations for PA catheter
- Measured values
- CVP 1-6 mm Hg (reflects right atrial pressure).
- PAP Systolic 15-30mm Hg, Diastolic 6-12mm Hg.
- PCWPÂ 6 - 12mm Hg. Estimates left atrial heart
pressure and left ventricular end diastolic
pressure. - CO 3.5 - 7.5 L/min
- Sv02Â (70 - 75). Â Drawn from the end of the
pulmonary artery catheter. Used to calculate how
well oxygen is extracted by the tissues. Â
39Special considerations for PA catheter
40Special considerations for PA catheter
- the LDP is important with regard to pulmonary
artery catheter monitoring in three situations. - The catheter is in the nondependent collapsed
lung, the measured cardiac output and mixed
venous blood (pvo2) may be decreased. - When the nondependent lung is ventilated with
PEEP and the catheter is in the nondependent
lung, Ppaw may not equal Pla. - When the catheter is in the dependent lung, Ppaw
will be a faithful index of Pla, even if PEEP is
used
41Message to Take Home
Monitors are useful adjuncts, But they alone
cannot replace Careful observation by
Anaesthesiologist.
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