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Dr. S. Parthasarathy MD., DA., DNB, MD (Acu), Dip. Diab. DCA, Dip. Software statisticsPhD ( physiology) Yes we inject local anesthetics into the subarachnoid space Neural Cardiovascular Respiratory Thermal GI and hepatic Genitourinary Coagulation Changes Neural Local anesthetics block sodium channels to cause stoppage of conduction Spinal rootlets SSEM from tibial nerve blocked But direct stimulation the cord – evokes response !! Neural Blockade of the anterior nerve root fibers result in blockade of efferent motor and autonomic transmission. Neural blockade of posterior nerve root fibers results in the blockade of somatic and visceral impulses. sympathetic Partial parasympathetic- ↓ thoracolumbar ↓ cranio + sacral Neural - - (differential blockade ) Small nerves are blocked better Sympathetic 2 segments higher than sensory , two segments higher than motor ( may be 6 also ?) Sensory level of T3 – complete sympathetic block Local anesthetic concentration – deciding factor Thickness , myelination also play roles Stimulate the nerve - more channels open – easily blocked ( frequency dependent blockade ) Differential block is due to dilution of local anesthetics and different sensitivity of nerve fibres Sedation with spinal Inhibits ARAS – afferent input from lower limbs blocked and hence the effect . (Sedation not related to sedatives ) Think of epidural with GA !! Decreased dose of sedatives by 30 % CVS Level is below L1 – Vasodilation produces sympathetic response to cause tachycardia !! Try to maintain output – T10 sensory is the level where the tilt is towards hypotension intrinsic chronotropic stretch receptor of the right atrium and great veins which in turn decreases the chronotropic and inotropic drive of heart, ( more blood rt. Atrium – stretch – tachy ) Reverse bainbridge !! Cardiovascular effects Veno and arteriodilatation ( vasodilation ) Venodilation predominates – 75 %blood (less smooth muscle ) Decreased preload and decreased cardiac output Arteriodilation – decreased afterload !! But overall hypotension and decreased cardiac output T1 to T4 – cardio accelerator fibres - bradycardia Combined injection of alpha and beta blocker Hypotension incidence is 33 % in non obstetric Blockade of splanchnic veins – (T6 to L1) – main cause Sympathetic innervation more in viscera than limb veins Only caudal and lumbar level – venous pooling less CVS SVR 15 – 18 % reduction - 25 % in old patients BP 26 % ----- 32 % ↓ ↓ Cerebral CBF 12 % ---- 19 % fall. autoregulation works if the hypotension is Clinically insignificant !! gradual .. 55 – 140 MAP But LSCS – spinal level T4 Compress the IVC – suddenness – auto regulation ?? BP fall – more ??? Old age , higher injection site , high level the use of head-up posture any degree of hypovolaemia – pre-existing or induced by surgery administration of sedatives, opioids. induction agents positive pressure ventilation. Some abstracts ?? Rennin may not increase but Arginine vasopressin increase after spinal Reverse with SNP infusion Do these systems complement each other to prevent hypo ?? Acute infusion of ACE inhibitors and spinal – hypotension is more severe Chronic intake of ACE inhibitors and spinal – not so – may continue the drug – says newer studies Balance is better MAP falls – coronary pressure falls - Myocardial oxygen supply falls but brady is ok during earlier tachy ?? Preload, afterload and heart rate decrease – no danger Heart rate (around 13 % incidence ) – non obstetric Increased with low levels Decrease with high level – cardio accelerator fibers blocked Unopposed vagus Risks of hypo and brady are inverse !! Risks Young age ASA I Beta blocked Level above T5 Prolonged PR interval Basal rate < 60 Resting sympathetic tone - ↑ - old age Resting parasympathetic tone - ↑ -young age In a nutshell Redistributive hypovolumia and paradoxical bradycardia Respiratory effects – more with high levels Parameter Effect lung volumes ↓ 5% VC , FVC , FEV1 ( ERV ↓ ) FEV1/FVC → TV → PEFR ↓ ABG → Ventilatory response to hypoxemia and CO2 → Bronchial tone → sympath/parasympath imbalance Still no change → no change , ↓ decrease Respiratory changes A rare respiratory arrest associated with spinal anesthesia is also unrelated to phrenic or inspiratory dysfunction but rather to hypoperfusion of the respiratory centers in the brainstem -- HOW DO WE KNOW !! As soon as we resusucitate, the breathing is normal to establish – no phrenic palsy !! In what you think as high spinal ?? Allow to breathe spontaneous The character of spontaneous ventilation is a guide to medullary blood flow Not advisable to control IPPV decreases venous return and cardiac output Respiratory changes Except for severely compromised patients with respiratory failure, inspiratory muscle function during neuraxial blocks should be adequate to maintain ventilatory function Respiratory cripples Its not inspiratory – but expiratory we are concerned for cough out secretions Thoracic surgeries Decreased phrenic nerve activity Decreased diaphragmatic activity Decreased FRC (functional residual capacity) Atelectasis & hypoxia due to V/Q (ventilation/perfusion) mismatch Regional decreases !! Respiratory system Patients with high spinal or epidural blocks may complain of dyspnea despite normal or elevated minute ventilation. This likely results from the patient's inability to feel the chest wall move while breathing Blow to the their own hands to diagnose Check BP – reassure Does spinal do anything ?? Surgery ↓ Local and systemic endocrine, metabolic and immune responses Stress response Surgery increase the following adrenocorticotropic hormone cortisol epinephrine Spinal blunts the increase norepinephrine vasopressin activation of the renin-angiotension-aldosterone system Growth hormone Insulin and glucagon spinal ? What does spinal do ?? parameter Response Glucose ↓ Ketones ↓ Lactate ↓ FFA and glycerol ↓ Insulin clearance ↓ Nitrogen balance ? Oxygen consumption ? Decreased met. Acute phase reactants → Catabolic ↓ anabolic Gastrointestinal Effects Unopposed parasympathetic Gastric hyperperistalsis Nausea and vomiting Atropine !! – think of hypo Intestine peristalsis – normal Contracted gut – Non gut surgeries easy !! Obstructed hernia – can we do ?? but sphincters relax Better pH in stomach Hepatic dysfunction not as in GA if MAP is maintained Renal Effects Neuraxial blockade has little effect on the blood flow to the renal system. Auto regulation maintains adequate blood flow to the kidneys as long as perfusion pressure is maintained. urinary retention, causing delayed patient discharge from the hospital and frequent catheterization. Bladder functions After the induction of spinal anaesthesia, the urge to void (normal detrusor function) is abolished within 60 seconds. Recovery does not return until sensory anaesthesia has regressed to the S3 sacral segment. After lignocaine – 235 minutes After bupivacaine – 462 minutes S3 thin nerve ?? – lot of IV fluids ?? Spinal in already kidney dysfunction Maintain MAP Less blood loss No major fluid shifts No ileus Then it does not alter Thermoregulation Core hypothermia with spinal anaesthesia develops primarily from a re-distribution of heat from core tissues, which are well-perfused tissues such as the head and trunk, to the peripheral tissues, or arms and legs. Do we monitor temperature in spinals ?? Thermal decrease 0.8 degrees centi. Tonic vasoconstriction gone Threshold set aside So muscle contraction is the main compensation So shivering – drugs Warm air rewarming – faster recovery to normal because of vasodilation and thermal transfer than GA Coagulation effects Postoperative hypercoagulability is a known problem Neuraxial anestheisia modifies as such – virchow triad Blood flow better and concentration of clotting factors are less . Platelet count – no effect – but platelet inhibition by spinal . Blood loss decreased by 30 % in major surgeries with spinal ( THR and prostate ) The tone is the cause ?? Summary Neural – rootlets , sedation (ARAS) CVS – BP, SVR, venous return , HR RS – PEFR FVC Endocrine Thermal – hypothermia Renal – blood flow ok but bladder dysfunction GI – hyperperistalsis, nausea , liver Coagulation Thank you all