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Case study Anesthetic assessment

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A young man with a stab wound to the left anterior chest needs an anesthetic for ... You are tasked to give the anesthetic. Case Presentation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Case study Anesthetic assessment


1
Case study Anesthetic assessment Risk
  • ??? Int ???

2
Case Presentation
  • A young man with a stab wound to the left
    anterior chest needs an anesthetic for an
    exploration of the wound. You are tasked to give
    the anesthetic.

3
Case Presentation
  • Significant clinical findings preoperatively are
  • Semi-comatose
  • BP 70/20
  • Pulse rate 145/min
  • Very soft heart sounds (hardly audible)
  • ? ? JVP
  • Pulses paradoxus (gt10mmHg decrease in systolic
    blood pressure with spontaneous inspiration)
  • Cyanosis
  • Anuric
  • Hct .40

4
Discussion
  • Differential diagnosis
  • Pathophysiological explanation
  • Anesthetic management

5
Differential diagnosis
  • Cardiac tamponade
  • hemothorax
  • Tension pneumothorax
  • pneumohemothorax
  • Tracheobronchial injury

6
Differential diagnosis
  • Cardiac tamponade
  • Becks triad hypotension, ? JVP, distant heart
    sound
  • Chest discomfort
  • Unconscious, obtunded, convulsion
  • Tachypnea/dyspnea
  • Renal failure / abdominal plethora / hepatic
    (shock liver) mesenteric ischemia
  • Pulus Paradoxus
  • Kussmauls sign

7
Differential diagnosis
  • Cardiac tamponade Dx
  • EKG
  • low voltage
  • electrical alternans
  • Echocardiography 

8
Differential diagnosis
  • Tension pneumothorax
  • Cyanosis and shock
  • Decreased breathing sound
  • Hyper-resonant in percussion
  • jugular vein engorgement
  • Trachea deviation
  • Hemothorax
  • Cyanosis and shock
  • Decreased breathing sound
  • dullness in percussion
  • jugular vein engorgement or collapse
  • ? Hct

9
Differential diagnosis
  • Tracheobronchial injury
  • dyspnea
  • Pneumomediastinum
  • subcutaneous emphysema
  • Hemoptysis
  • Still air leak from chest tube

10
BP? HR?
  • Cardiac tamponade is characterized by a continuum
    from an effusion causing detectable effects to
    full-blown circulatory collapse.
  • an effusion reduces the volume of the cardiac
    chambers such that cardiac output begins to
    decline

11
HR?
  • The compensatory response to a significant
    pericardial effusion includes increased
    adrenergic stimulation and parasympathetic
    withdrawal, which cause tachycardia and increased
    contractility.
  • CO ?gt brain blood supply ?gt Semi-comatose
  • CO ? gt kidney blood supply ? gt Anuric
  • CO ? gt peripheral blood supply ? gt Cyanosis

12
Pulses paradoxus
  • abnormally large decrease in systolic blood
    pressure (gt10 mmHg) on inspirations
  • ??gt??????RA pressure ? gt systemic venous return
    ? gt RV volume ? gt the interventricular septum
    shifts to the left gt ?? stroke volume ? CO ?

13
? ? JVP
Prominent systolic x descent and absence of
diastolic y descent (x descent atrial diastole,
y descent A?V )
14
? ? JVP
  • the right atrium is receiving blood from systemic
    venous. In pericardial tamponade, the right
    ventricle only fills during early systole, so
    that only an x descent is observed.

15
Anesthetic management
  • Volume expanding agents such as blood, plasma,
    dextran, or saline may be used, but only as
    temporizing measures
  • the associated increase in intracardiac pressures
    and heart size may produce a further increase in
    intrapericardial pressure
  • Increase peripheral resistance not effective
    (tamponade has evoked maximal endogenous
    sympathetic response)

16
Anesthetic management
  • Preoperative prepare
  • It would be unwise to administer any type of
    anxiolytic. Sympathoadrenal activation exists to
    support perfusion to vital organ. By partially
    blocking this compensatory effect with an
    anxiolytic, cardiovascular collapse may ensue.
  • Indwelling arterial access for beat-to-beat
    displaying of systematic arterial pressure and
    for obtaining blood gas
  • Swan-Ganz catheter, debatable?

17
Anesthetic management Choice of Intravenous
anesthetics drug
  • Barbiturate
  • Thiopental mild direct cardiac depression,
    lowers BP, compensatory tachycardia (baroreflex)
  • non-barbiturate
  • Etomidate little change in cardiac function,
    mild dose-related respiratory depression,
    decreased cerebral metabolism
  • Ketamine Adrenergic activation (increase HR, BP,
    C.O. ), minimal respiratory effect
  • Propofol GABA receptor, respiratory and
    cardiovascular depression

18
Anesthetic management
  • Intraoperative
  • Positive pressure mechanical ventilation should
    be avoided in patients with acute tamponade
    because it further reduces cardiac filling
  • Chest opening normalize the pressure between
    pericardium and the heart chamber ? drastic
    improvement in blood pressure and SV ?vasoactive
    and cardioacive agent can be quickly weaned

19
Anesthetic management
  • Postoperative the timing of extubation
  • Clinical stability
  • stable hemodynamics without need for inotropic or
    vasoactive support
  • Intact neurologic function
  • alertness and ability to comprehend and execute
    simple verbal command
  • Adequate pulmonary function
  • Acceptable ABG and adequate weaning parameters
  • Normal BT and neuromuscular function

20
Thanks for your attention!!
  • Reference
  • Yao Artusio's anesthesiology problem-oriented
    patient management, 5th ed
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