Title: Anesthesia
1Anesthesia
2Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to
be understood. Marie Curie (868-1934)
3Anesthesia
- General anesthesia
- Regional anesthesia
- Monitored anesthesia care
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7Before him surgery was agony. Epitaph on a
monument honoring W. Morton
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9General anesthesia
- The goals of general anesthesia
- - Mandatory -amnesia/sedation/hypnosis
- -analgesia
- -maintenance of
homeostasis - - Optionally -muscle relaxation
10General anesthesia indications
- Indications based on the surgical procedure
- -surgical procedures requiring analgesia
and muscle relaxation, that cannot be performed
using regional anesthesia techniques upper
abdominal surgery, thoracic surgery, head and
neck surgery, shoulder surgery etc. - -surgical procedures that significally
interfere with vital functions neurosurgery,
thoracic surgery, cardiac surgery, surgery of the
aorta etc.
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12General anesthesia indications
- Indications based on the patient condition
- -different pathologies or ongoing
treatments that make the regional anesthesia
tachniques contraindicated the patients with
coagulation disorders, anticoagulant treatments,
infections or other lesions in the area where a
regional anesthesia procedure would be performed - -systemic diseases with definite functional
limitations the patient with respiratory
insufficency, shock, coma, major
hydroelectrolytic or acido-basic imbalance.
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14Drugs used for general anesthesia
- Hypnosis
- Analgesia
- Muscle relaxation
- Maintenance of homeostasis
- can all be achieved by administering
- one or more drugs
15Drugs used for general anesthesia
- Inhalatory anesthetics
- -gaseous form
- nitrous oxide
- -volatile liquids
- halothane, isoflurane, sevoflurane si
desflurane -
- The advantage of entering and leaving the body by
ventilation with minimal metabolization. - They result in sedation, analgesia and light
muscle relaxation.
16- The potency of an inhalatory anesthetic
- MAC (minimal alveolar concentration)
- the alveolar concentration of the anesthetic
that abolishes the movements caused by the skin
incision in 50 of the patients -
- Each inhalatory anesthetic has its own specific
MAC. - Modern anesthesia - new types of MAC
- MAC intubation ( MAC that facilitates the
intubation in 50 of the patients) - MAC bar (MAC that abolishes the hemodynamic
response in 50 of the patients) - MAC awake (MAC at which awakening occurs in 50
of the patients).
17Inhalant anesthetic Class Concentration in balanced anesthesia Advantages/disadvantages Side effects
Nitrous oxide Gaseous 40-66 Light analgesia Accumulation in airway spaces Risk of hypoxemia Euforia
Halothane Volatile 1,5-2 Bronchodilatation Slow dynamics Cardio-vascular depression
Isoflurane Volatile 1,5-2 Bronchodilatation Medium dynamics Vasodilatation
Sevoflurane Volatile 2-3 Bronchodilatation Fast dynamics Cardio-vascular stability Compound A
Desflurane Volatile 6-8 Airway irritant Special vapporiser Sympathetic stimulation
18- Intravenous anesthetics
- Short acting
- Barbiturates ? metohexital
-
thiopental, tiamital - Imidazolic compounds ? etomidate
- Alkylphenols ? propofol
- Steroids ? eltanolone
- Long acting
- Ketamine
- Benzodiazepines ? diazepam, midazolam
19- THIOPENTAL
- -very rapid induction maximal effect in 40 s
- -superficial anesthetic sleep
- -NO an analgesic effect
- -weak muscle relaxation.
- Administration slow i.v.
- Side effects risk of respiratory and circulatory
depression
20- PROPOFOL
- -very liposoluble fatty acid
- -hepatic metabolisation in great extent ? short
effect -
-
-
- Pharmacodynamic action
- -pharmacologic effects similar with those of
Thiopental - -less residual effects.
21- KETAMINE
- Pharmacodynamic action
- Dissociative anesthetic
- - dissociation from the
environment - - superficial sleep
- - strong analgesia
- Advantages-No respiratory depressant effect
- -hemodynamic stability by
the release of catecholamines - -bronchodilatatory effect
22Hypnotic Class Induction dose Single dose duration of action Side effects
Thiopental Short acting barbituric 2-4 mg/kg 5-10 min Arterial hypotension, respiratory depression, tachycardia, decreases the cardiac output
Propofol Alkylphenol 1-2 mg/kg 5-10 min Arterial hypotension, respiratory depression, tachycardia
Etomidat Imidazolic compound 0,3 mg/kg 5-10 min Adrenal glad inhibition
Diazepam Benzodiazepines 0,3 mg/kg 10-60 min Interindividual response variability
Midazolam Benzodiazepines 0,2-0,3 mg/kg 5-15 min Respiratory depression
23- Analgetics
- Opioids
- -the class of analgesics with the
broadest intra-anesthetic utilisation - -profound dose-dependant analgesia
- -in spite of their quasi-constant use
during general anesthesia, the opioids are not
anesthetics because the loss of consciousness is
not a regular effect - -they regularly result in respiratory
dose-dependent depression. Cardiovascular
depression is a variable effect.
24Opioids Class Medium dose Single dose duration of action Side effects
Morphine µ Agonist 0,2 mg/kg 30-60 min Respiratory depression, sedation. hTA, bradycardia
Pethidine µ/? Agonist 1 mg/kg 20-30 min Sedation, nausea/vomiting, HTA, tachycardia
Fentanil µ Agonist 5-15 µg/kg 20 min Respiratory depression
Sufentanil µ Agonist 0,3-1 µg/kg Respiratory depression
Alfentanil µ Agonist 5-50 µg/kg Respiratory depression
Remifentanil µ Agonist 0,5-1 µg/kg 1-3 min Respiratory depression
Buprenorphine Agonist/ antagonist 0,3 mg 3-4 ore Ceilling effect
25- Muscle relaxants
- -substances that act at the neuromuscular
junction level and prevent the transmission of
the physiologic stimulus for the muscular
contraction - -NO action on the CNS, NO loss of
consciousness, NO analgesia - -utilized for the facilitation of the
airway instrumentation, of mechanical ventilation
and of the surgical intervention - -results in alveolar hypoventilation or
apnea by the action on the respiratory muscles - -minimal cardio-vascular effects.
26Muscular relaxant Class Intubation dose Single dose duration of action Particular instructions
Succinylcholine D 1-1,5 mg/kg 10-15 min Full stomach
Pancuronium ND 0,1 mg/kg 30-40 min Bradycardia
Vecuronium ND 0,08 mg/kg 20-30 min Cardiac affections
Atracurium ND 0,5 mg/kg 20 min Kidney failure
Cisatracurium ND 0,2 mg/kg 20 min Kidney failure
Mivacurium ND 0,2 mg/kg 10-15 min Short interventions
Rocuronium ND 0,6-0,9 mg/kg 30-60 min Full stomach
27 28Anesthesia Apparatus
- Components
- -connection with the sources
- of medical fluids
- -flowmeters
- -vaporizers
- -anesthetic circuit
- -CO2 scavenger system
- -balloon ventilation system
- -overpressure valve
- -mechanical ventilation module
- -emergency oxygen delivery circuit
-
29- -ventilation parameters setting module
- -ventilation parameters and inhalation
anesthetics monitoring module - -alarm module
- -vacuum system (sucction).
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31- Intraanesthesic monitoring
32Intraanesthesic monitoring
- Standard I
- -the presence in the room of an
anesthesiologist or a qualified staff member
throughout the duration of the anesthesia. - Standard II
- -oxygenation inspiratory oxygen
concentration (FiO2), pulsoxymetry (SpO2) - -ventilation clinical evaluation,
auscultation, capnography - -circulation electrocardioscopy
(continuous), noninvasive arterial blood
pressure and pulse measurement - -body temperature.
33Monitoring
Respiratory Airway pressure, tidal volume, minute ventilation, respiratory rate, O2/CO2 inspiratory concentration, concentration of volatile anesthetic agent, pulsoxymetry
Cardiovascular Non-invasive arterial pressure, multiple leads ECG, computerized analysis of ST segment, central venous pressure, pulmonary artery pressure (systolic, medium, diastolic, wedge) cardiac output, extra-vascular pulmonary water, peripheral vascular resistance, ScvO2, SvO2.
Hypnosis BIS (bispectral index)
Muscle relaxation Peripheral nerve stimulator
Renal Diuresis
Temperature Central, peripheral
Acid - base equilibrium Blood gas analysis
Electrolytes Na, K, Cl, Ca
Haematological analysis, coagulation studies Platelets, aPTT, INR
Oxygen transportation Hb, Ht, cardiac output, SaO2, PaO2
Metabolic Glucose
34 35- Preanesthetic exam
- -psychological preparation of the patient
- -clinical and laboratory evaluation of the
patient - -asignement to an anesthetic risk group
(ASA scale) - -choosing the anesthetic technique and
obtaining the informed consent - -set up of an anesthetic plan.
-
-
Risk I Patient without systemic diseases
Risk II Patient with systemic diseases without functional limitation
Risk III Patient with systemic diseases with functional limitation
Risk IV Patient with uncompensated systemic disease
Risk V Dying patient
Risk VI Brain dead patient, organ donor
E Emergency procedure
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37- Optimizing the patient status
- -the correction of dysfunctions and
diseases in the preoperative period. - Premedication
- -reduced anxiety and reduced need for
intra-operative anesthetics - -decreasing certain risks
(parasympathetic reflexes, the risk of
aspiration) - -the facilitation of postoperative
analgesia.
38 Phases of general anesthesia
- Induction phase
- -the period of transition from the
state of conscious to the state of general
anesthesia - -CNS depression, ventilatory,
cardiovascular depression, muscle relaxation - -securing the airway.
- Maintenace phase
- -providing the adequate depth of
anesthesia by administering anesthetics,
analgesics and muscle relaxant agents. - Emergency phase
- -the interruption of the administration
of all volatile or intravenous anesthetic agents - -the antagonisation of the muscle
relaxant drug.
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46General anesthesia techniques
- Balanced anesthesia
- Intravenous anesthesia
- Volatile anesthesia
- Combined techniques of general and regional
anesthesia - -general anesthesia epidural
anesthesia.
47General anesthesia complications
Respiratory Hypoxemia, hypercapnia laryngeal spasm, bronchospasm, aspiration, ARDS, atelectasis
Cardio-vascular High/low blood pressure, tachy/bradycardia, myocardial ischemia, arrhythmia , hypovolemia, low cardiac output
CNS Convulsions, shivers, post anoxic encephalopathy, paresis by compression or elongation of peripheral nerves
Digestive Vomiting or regurgitation, hiccup
Renal Oligo/anuria, urinary retention, pre - renal failure
Metabolice Hyper/hypoglycemia, malignant hyperthermia
Hidro-electrolitics Extracellular space expansion (interstitial oedema), hypo/hyperkalemia, hypocalcemia
Acid-base Hypercloremic metabolic acidosis, lactacidemic
Coagulation Thrombocytopenia, dilutional coagulopathy, deep venous thrombosis
Allergical Cutaneous eruptions, Quincke oedema, bronchospasm, anaphylactic shock
Cutaneous Decubitus injury, accidental burns
48- Regional anesthesia
- Subarachnoid (spinal)
- Epidural
- Sequential
- Caudal
49Regional anesthesia
- Indications
- -the area can be anesthetised using
regional blocks - -the surgical procedure does not affect the
vital functions - -patient's informed consent
- Contraindications
- -patient's refusal
- -active coagulation disorders or
anticoagulant treatment - -infections or haematoma at injection site
- -neurological deficit and lack of
cooperation. -
50 Spinal Anethesia analgesia muscle
relaxation sympathetic blockade
-sympathetic blockade hypotension, bradycardia,
urinary retention -hypovolemia is an
absolute contraindication of spinal anesthesia
-epidural analgesia is the standard
procedure for peripartum analgesia
-complications systemic (high spred of
anesthetic- total spinal anesthesia or systemic
toxicity), headache.
51Local anesthetics
Amides Esters
Lidocain Prilocain Procain
Mepivacain Etidocain Tetracain
Bupivacain Ropivacain Benzocain
Clinical use of local anesthetics
Central regional anesthesia/analgesia
Regional intravenous anesthesia
Peripheral nerve block or plexus
Infiltration anesthesia
Local anesthesia
Blocking of thehemodynamic response during tracheal intubation
in regional anesthesia we frequently use the
combination between a local anesthetic and
adrenaline, an opioid or clonidine, increasing
the duration and quality of the block
52- During regional anesthesia mandatory
equipments - Anesthesia delivery system
- Equipments and materials for airway management
- Oxygen source
- Monitoring ventilation, oxygenation,
circulation, blood pressure, EKG. -
53- Spinal anesthesia (sub-arachnoid block)
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62- Sequential (combined) anesthesia
- spinal / epidural
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66- Plexus anesthesia or peripheral nerves blockade
- Single-shot
- Catheter
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68- Local anesthesia
- contact
- topical - skin, mucous membrane application
- tissue infiltration
69- Monitored anesthesia care
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71Monitored anesthesia care
- intravenous administration of
anxiolytic, sedative, analgesic and amnesic drugs
either isolated or supplementing a regional
anesthesia procedure - indicated in
painful diagnostic or therapeutic procedures or
supplementing a inappropiate regional block
- the CPR equipments must be close-by at all
times - complications respiratory
depression with hypoventilation and loss of
airway protection.
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