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UNSW School of Medicine Liverpool Clinical School Critical Care Rotation Anaesthetics Study Guide Blair Munford, BMedSc, MB,ChB, FFARACS, FANZCA Senior Specialist Anaesthetist, Liverpool Hospital 1 Aims of Anaesthetic Attachment • To understand the scope of the practice of anaesthesia. • To understand the role of the anaesthetist as part of the surgical or procedural team. • To gain exposure to airway management and other procedural skills • To understand the importance of the perioperative process including pre-anaesthetic assessment, investigations, and optimisation. • To understand post anaesthetic care including pain management, and the indications for specialised postanaesthetic monitoring & support. • To revise/enhance key concepts & simple competencies in emergency assessment and resuscitation, including CPR/BLS/ALS. • For those interested, to acquire insight into anaesthetics as a medical career option. 2 Part I: Scope & Development of Anaesthetic Practice Imagine a world without anaesthesia . . . 3 What medicine was like prior to the invention of anaesthesia: • Surgical operations performed rarely & only as a last resort. Death was the expected outcome, from shock, haemorrhage, or infection. • When surgery unavoidable, patient was held down by assistants & surgeons operated as fast as possible. The first incision was often deliberately brutal in the hope that the patient would faint, allowing less haste. • No analgesia in labour & interventional/operative obstetrics essentially unknown – except post mortem (original meaning of Caesarean Section) 4 Without anaesthesia . . . • Surgical advances would have been minimal. • Childbirth would remain a major risk for baby and/or mother. • Concepts of intensive care & resuscitation would not have developed. • Pain - acute and chronic - would have remained an inevitable part of life. 5 Without doubt the development of anaesthesia has been one of the top ten medical advances of all time. Some have even ranked it as the most important medical invention ever. Others rank it amongst greatest discoveries of any type in human history. 6 But what exactly is anaesthesia? A state that encompasses (1)analgesia plus (2) arreflexia (muscle relaxation or lack of movement) and (in the case of general anaesthesia) (3) hypnosis; enabling painful or distressing procedures to be performed humanely. This is the “Triad of Anaesthesia” 7 The other triad of anaesthesia THE MISSION IS (in order of importance): 1. Preserve life 2. Relieve suffering 3. Provide optimum conditions for procedure (Any fool can do the third by ignoring the first. Doing the second by ignoring the first is called euthanasia. The art and science of anaesthesia is in being able to provide all three.) 8 Anaesthesia can be: • Cerebral – Sedation/analgesia – General • Inhalational/spontaneous ventilating • Balanced/controlled ventilation • Neuro-interruptive – Local – Regional – Neuraxial (Or some combination of two or more of these) 9 Classification of Anaesthetics Anaesthesia General Alternative Regional Dissociative Surface/topical Controlled ventilation Intubated Spontaneous ventilation Intubated infiltration Auditory Nerve/plexus block Electrical Spinal blocks Hypnosis LMA Epidural: Manual Mechanical Mask Subarachnoid cervical, thoracic, lumbar, caudal Acupuncture Single shot, intermittent, continuous Local anaesthetic, narcotic/adjuvant, combination 10 But wait . . . there’s more: 11 Scope of Anaesthetic Practice • • • • • • • • • • • Anaesthesia for surgery Sedation/anaesthesia for other procedures Obstetric analgesia/anaesthesia services Pre-anaesthetic assessment & perioperative medicine Acute & Chronic Pain Services Vascular access services: Central venous lines, et al. Resuscitation: Trauma team/MET/Prehospital Teaching: Procedural skills/resuscitation/analgesia Intensive Care practice/cover/support Operating theatre management/coordination Critical care transport (It’s a broad church) 12 Part II: Perioperative Medicine “The way of the future” 13 What is perioperative medicine? “Integrated multidisciplinary management of the surgical or procedural patient’s hospital admission & stay.” 14 Perioperative system includes: • • • • • • • • • Identification of patient requiring procedure Referral to perioperative service Screening for level of workup required Pre-anaesthetic assessment/plan Referral & investigations as required. Admission at appropriate pre-op interval Post-operative drug/fluid/other therapy Appropriate post op level of care & stay Discharge at earliest appropriate point 15 But why? • • • • Minimize unnecessary pre-op bed days. Minimize preoperative cancellations Enable more predictable bed occupancy Minimize pseudo-urgent blood tests & other investigations • Improve post operative care & shorten post operative stay 16 The Pre-anaesthetic Consultation • What? Targeted history & examination, & formulation of anaesthetic/perioperative plan. • Who? Ideally by the anaesthetist for the procedure (not always possible). • Whom? All patients should have some form of this. • When? At the earliest appropriate opportunity (Obviously this varies on a case basis) • Why? To enable optimimum pre-anaesthetic preparation, risk minimisation, informed consent, and allaying of anxiety. 17 Pre-operative preparation may include premedication Use if required, not “one size fits all” Aims: 1. Ameliorate anxiety Usually with a benzodiazepine such as temazepam 2. Relieve pain – predominantly in the acute setting – usually with narcotics. 3. Prevent reflux/aspiration - in at risk patient Usually (a) H2 blocker or PPI 6-8 hrs preop if possible, then (b) non particulate antacid immediately preop. 4. Treat other medical conditions e.g. asthma prophylaxis. 18 Most regular medications are continued, including on the day of surgery Exceptions include: (a) Oral hypoglycaemics (b) Antithrombotic agents (mostly) 19 ASA Physical Status • • • • ASA 1 – Healthy patient ASA 2 – Mild or controlled systemic disease ASA 3 – Significant systemic disease ASA 4 – Severe systemic disease – current or constant threat to life • ASA 5 – Moribund patient unlikely to survive with or without procedure • ASA 6 – Brain dead patient (organ donor) +/- E = Emergency procedure 20 Relevance of this? • Risk stratification • Workload/resource utilisation planning • Remuneration aspects 21 Perioperative (Preanaesthetic) Clinic Surgical clinic Nurse Clinic Checked up, satisfied as fit & suitable Decides to proceed with planned time, date & procedure Surgeon refers case Satisfied with it; decides to send it back to her for mx Not certain;sends only case notes to anaesthetist to review it Decides to further investigate. May cancel, postpone, refer case or decide to do it Not quite satisfied; takes over review & mx 22 Preanaesthetic Clinic • The Doctor takes a quick history, leading questions are allowed as major diagnoses should already be known • Asks for hypertension, diabetes, asthma,epilepsy, previous anaesthetics, allergies, complications, medications being used • A quick examination is done, Ix like Xray, ECG, UES & Blood ix are done • ASA categorised, anaesthesia decided • Explained to patient about anaesthetics, risks, PCA & possible complications 23 Preanaesthetic Clinic Based on: History Examination, Investigation . . . Decision: To do the planned procedure To postpone the procedure till fully investigated optimised To cancel the procedure 24 Part III: Safety & Monitoring in Anaesthesia 25 Safety in anaesthesia is paramount “When it goes right, no-one remembers. . . When it goes wrong, no-one forgets” . . . So the aim is to make anaesthesia as forgettable as possible! 26 Safety Initiatives in Anaesthesia Anaesthetists have been the leaders in safety initiatives in medicine – e.g. : • Privileged reporting & investigation of deaths under or associated with anaesthesia in most states. • Systematic reporting of incidents and near misses • Collegial policies on minimum standards for facilities, equipment, monitoring, staffing, & training. • Publication of algorithms – e.g: difficult airway management; malignant hyperthermia • Simulation & contingency training e.g. difficult airway workshops, emergency management of anaesthetic crises (EMAC) course. 27 Principles of Safety • Recognise risk – pre anaesthetic consultation • Avoid risk if possible – e.g. can procedure be done under LA? • Mitigate risk – optimise patient condition, select safest technique/agents/resources – e.g “cardiac” anaesthetic & postop ventilation. • Plan & be prepared for emergencies – e.g. predrawn emergency drugs, backup airway plan. • Observe/monitor for deviations & crises. • Respond in a timely& appropriate fashion. • Call for help/backup if required. 28 “The price of safety is eternal vigilance” “Clinical observation is the cornerstone of patient monitoring” - ANZCA Policy statements (several) OR . . . “The best patient monitor is still the one between your ears – so make sure it’s switched on” – my take on the above. 29 Monitoring in anaesthesia Basic (all/most patients) • Pulse oximetry • ECG • Noninvasive (cuff) BP • Capnography • Oxygen concentration • Agent monitoring • Airway pressures • Temperature • • • • • • • • • Others as indicated Invasive arterial BP Precordial stethescope Ventilator alarm(s) Nerve stimulator BIS/entropy Spirometry CVP “Swann Ganz” (PAP) Transoesophageal echo 30 Pulse oximetry • First monitor I put on most patients & first I usually look at. • If this is OK, then patient has a pulse, a survivable blood pressure (at least 60/) and is oxygenating their blood. • But if it’s not right, it’s not very specific – i.e. it may be as simple as a dislodged probe, or as serious as a cardiac arrest. • Doesn’t guarantee tissue oxygenation – may be normal in extreme anaemia, carboxy- or methaemoglobinaemia, cyanide posoning, etc. 31 Electrocardiogram • Good monitor for: – Arrhythmias/ectopics – Some electrolyte abnormalities (K+ & Ca++) – Ischaemic/strain changes (Provided leads are placed correctly!) • Does not monitor: – Volume status – Cardiac output – Blood pressure Remember: it is entirely possible to die with a relatively normal ECG! 32 Noninvasive arterial blood pressure (NIBP) monitoring • • • • • Usually automated Convenient but not reliable: Dependant on correct cuff size & position Not continuous Usually under-estimates true hyper-& overestimates true hypotensive values. • Interferes with IV infusions & pulse oximetry • Should not be placed on limb with fistula or lymphoedema. 33 Capnography • “Gold standard” for verification of airway. • Can also give information on: – – – – – Dead space/V-Q mismatching Adequacy of ventilation Spontaneous respiratory effort during controlled vent’n. Rebreathing: circuit problems or inadequate gas flow. Venous return, RV function & pulmonary blood flow e.g. thrombotic, gas or fat embolism 34 Oxygen monitoring • Monitors machine rather than patient. • Only specific monitor of oxygen supply (Other safety features assume/depend on the gas from O2 outlets & cylinders actually being oxygen) N.B. Before adoption/mandating of oxygen monitoring, all reported (& thankfully very rare) “wrong gas” anaesthetic incidents (misconnected pipelines or incorrectly filled cylinders) resulted in the death of the first patient exposed in every case. 35 Anaesthetic agent monitoring • Identifies (hopefully confirms!) anaesthetic agent being used • Measures inspiratory & expiratory concentrations • Expiratory (alveolar) concentration enables calculation of MAC fraction or multiple – i.e. estimation of anaesthetic depth. • Now mandatory when inhalational anaesthetic agents are used. 36 Temperature monitoring • Anaesthesia promotes hypothermia by: – Decreased metabolic rate -> decreased heat production – Redistribution of blood flow -> increased heat loss • Patients may need temperature support – Passive (prevent heat loss) – Active warming: forced air/ heated IV fluids • What you support you must monitor • Ideally monitor core temperature: Nasopharyngeal/oesophageal/bladder/PV Better than Skin/axillary/oral/rectal 37 Airway manometry Ventilator monitor • Usually analogue gauge on circle circuit • Monitors inflation pressure • With IPPV can help identify: • Mandatory when mechanical IPPV employed. • Usually integrated into ventilator w/automatic activation. • High (overpressure) & low (disconnect) functions Airway obstruction Bronchospasm Circuit leaks/faults 38 Precordial stethescope • “Traditional” monitor • Still used in some paediatric cases • Can monitors: Heart & respiratory rate Breath sounds presence & quality. Only as good as the person listening to it! Direct arterial pressure monitoring Invasive procedure, but: • Gold standard for real time haemodynamic assessment • Accurate, reliable. • Immediate warning of hypo/hypertension of any aetiology. 39 Nerve stimulator • Used with muscle relaxants (neuromuscular blockers): • Electrical stimulus to nerve then observation of innervated muscle. • Commonest site: Ulnar nerve • Nondepolarising block characterised by “fade” – weakening of contraction with (4) successive impulses “train of four.” • Assesses: - Density of block - Return of function - Point of safe reversal Depth of Anaesthesia monitoring • Uses simplified EEG recording & algorithm to produce number related to level of conciousness (lower no=deeper anaesthesia) • Two methods: bispectral edge (“BIS”) and entropy. • Role/value still controversial • Probably indicated for: – TIVA (as no MAC to monitor) – Patient w/history of awareness – Where lightest possible plane of anesthesia is essential 40 Other monitors • Central venous line. - Mostly used for drug infusions but can also measure CVP as a (not very accurate) guide to volume status. • Pulmonary artery (Swann Ganz) catheter - Can estimate LV filling pressure (preload) – a better guide to functional volume status than CVP - Also can measure cardiac output by thermodilution. • Trans-Oesphageal Echocardiography (TOE) Has become the gold standard cardiac function monitor. Able to estimate: - Ejection fraction/stroke volume/cardiac output - LV & RV Preload/pressures - Diastolic dysfunction (early index of ischaemia) • Spirometry Measurement of pressure volume loops & hence work of breathing in controlled, spont. & ass’t’d ventilation 41 Part IV: Anaesthetic Equipment & Airway Management 42 Introduction to & Overview of the Anaesthetic Machine Consists of three main parts: 1. “A cocktail bar” This is the backbar – which blends piped &/or bottle gasses: O2, N2O & air, and the vapour of (usually one only) volatile anaesthetic agent (liquid) to produce the desired blend or cocktail. 2. “A delivery service” This is the breathing circuit – which delivers the fresh gas mixture to the patient and removes carbon dioxide. There are three main classes of circuits. 3. “A bunch of hangers on” These are all the ancillaries attached to the anaesthetic machine but not part of its core function: typically suction system, patient monitors, drawers/trays for airway equipment, and a mechanical ventilator for hands-free controlled ventilation. 43 A Note of Caution: • Modern anaesthetic machines are complex devices that require special knowledge to operate. • In particular, knowledge of the pharmacology of inhaled anaesthetic agents is essential. • Undetected mishaps can be rapidly fatal. • A thorough check prior to use, appropriate for the particular machine, by an experienced person, is vital. • Some parts of the circuit e.g. filters & hoses, need to be changed after every or certain cases, or a different type of circuit may be selected & attached. An abbreviated recheck must be carried out after any such change. 44 Anaesthetic Circuits Three principal types: 1. 2. 3. Drawover or “semi-open” systems: where non-rebreathing valves are used to ensure unidirectional flow of gas. Principally now used in resuscitation & field anaesthetic systems, because of the ability to use ambient air instead of (some or even all) pressurised gas supply. Simple or “semi-closed” systems with pressurised fresh gas inflow, reservoir tube & bag in one of several different configurations. (Sometimes called Maplesen systems, after the man who classified & evaluated the different configurations). The patient breathes ‘to & fro’ through the reservoir tube & bag & the system relies on an adequate fresh gas flow to minimise rebreathing. Commonest example: the “Jackson-Rees T-piece (Maplesen “F”)” paediatric circuit. Circle, or closed circuit systems which use one way valves to direct expired gas through a carbon dioxide absorber. This gas can then be supplemented with only enough fresh gas mix to replenish the oxygen and anaesthetic agents taken up, and then rebreathed. This is the commonest type of anaesthetic circuit in modern practice. 45 Remember: The commonest anaesthetic circuit most medical & nursing staff will ever use is the non-rebreathing resuscitation bag (“Laerdal bag” or similar) . . . . . . to give the commonest anaesthetic and resuscitation drug of all: Oxygen 46 Another rule of three: The Triad of Resuscitation A – AIRWAY B – BREATHING C – CIRCULATION Or . . . Alternatively: (The triad of resuscitation – my own version) 1. Air goes in & out 2. Blood goes round & round 3. Variations on the first two are a BAD THING 47 Note that airway always comes first Airway isn’t everything . . . . . . but without it everything else is nothing. This is why anaesthetists are good people to have around at a resuscitation – and why a grounding in anaesthesia is good training for emergencies. 48 Airway Control – Why? • Prevent obstruction Anatomical/foreign body • Protect against aspiration Vomit/blood/secretions • Permit controlled ventilation For paralysis/deep anaesthesia Where ventilatory support required • Enable special manoeuvres e.g IPPV & PEEP for thoracotomy, laryngeal surgery with microlaryngeal tube, single lung deflation with double lumen ET tube. 49 Classification of airways SUPRAGLOTTIC TRANSGLOTTIC SUBGLOTTIC Oropharyngeal airway Nasopharyngeal airway Laryngeal Mask Airways (various) Combitube/PTL * Orotracheal tube (85% of placements oesophageal) - if one of the 15% placed tracheally Cricothyrotomy Nasotracheal tube Transtracheal jet catheter Intubating LMA Tracheostomy (w/ETT placed thru it) (Combitube/PTL) 50 The winner, and still champion: Endotracheal intubation (usually oral), remains the gold standard for airway management, . . . but . . . It is also the most difficult to master and carries the highest risk. Remember: An unrecognised oesophageal intubation has a 100% mortality 51 Emergency Airway Management (in anaesthesia & resuscitation) >90% 10% Rapid sequence intubation Other techniques: [or unmodified (“cold”) intubation if apnoeic & arreflexic] Supraglottic airway Fibreoptic intubation Surgical airway 52 Rapid Sequence Intubation: How to do it properly • • • • Preoxygenation: 3mins or 5 VC breaths. IV induction agent – titrated to effect Cricoid pressure – 30N. Suxamethonium 1.5mg/kg (IBW). – or Modified RSI: 0.9mg/kg rocuronium • No bag mask ventilation (unless hypoxic) • Intubation & confirmation of placement • (then & only then) Cricoid pressure released. 53 Remember (1) : every intubation attempt is a potential failed intubation. • You should always have a backup plan - i.e. a failed intubation drill. • Backup starts even before you start - with preoxygenation for every IV induction Remember (2): People don’t die of failure to intubate, but of failure to oxygenate 54 FAILED INTUBATION DRILL FIRSTLY MAINTAIN OXYGENATION! CAN YOU MASK VENTILATE? [With Geudels &/or nasopharyngeal airway if necessary] YES 1. Bag mask ventilation 2. Repeat attempt &/or alternate technique to intubate NO NO Supraglottic rescue airway e.g. LMA SUCCESSFUL? NO SUCCESSFUL? Subglottic (surgical) airway 55 Non endotracheal airways There’s more to anaesthetic airways than just ET tubes! Laryngeal masks (of various types) are the most widely used airways in modern anaesthetic practice: – Classic (original) & its various copies – reuseable or single use. – Reinforced – kink resistant & more flexible upper lumen to permit alternative positioning after insertion for oral/facial procedures. – Proseal - second lumen to communicate with oesophagus & allow drainage of gastric contents or placement of gastric tube. – Intubating – modified shape, more rigid, & lacking apeture bars – to enable passage of a special ET tube through it. 56 Non endotracheal airways II Advantages of laryngeal masks: Disadvantages of laryngeal masks • Hands free (compared to face mask/oral airway) • Easier to insert & become proficient at compared to ETT • Tolerated at lighter plane of anaesthesia than ETT. • Good protection against “top” aspiration - of saliva/mucus. • Pressure support & in some cases IPPV can be given. • Less secure airway - more prone to dislodgement than ETT • No protection against laryngospasm • Poor protection against “bottom” aspiration – of gastric contents (Except “Proseal”) • Not guaranteed to permit satisfactory IPPV – especially where high pressures required. Remember, the traditional facemask/chin lift +/- Geudel’s airway is still an acceptable – possibly even underutilised – technique for short simple cases. 57 Part V: Practical Anaesthetic Pharmacology & Related Management 58 Classification of drugs used for anaesthesia • • • • • “The Big Five “ Inhalation anaesthetic agents – gasses/vapours IV anaesthetic agents alias “Hypnotics” or “induction agents” Narcotic (& other) analgesics Muscle relaxants – neuromuscular blocking agents Local anaesthetic agents Other agents are often given as part of anaesthesia – e.g. antiemetics & autonomic agents, but are not conventionally regarded as anaesthetic agents per se. 59 Pharmacology 1: Inhalational Anaesthetic Agents • • • • Inhaled – therefore delivered via apparatus Gasses or volatile liquids Moderate to high lipid solubility – “solvents” Effects related to physical properties (rather than to a generic chemical structure) • Effects on multiple organ systems • Actual mode of action not yet fully elucidated, but thought to be by dissolving into cell membranes & causing secondary changes in configuration of ion channels. 60 Inhalational anaesthetics in modern anaesthetic practice include: • Nitrous oxide (N20)– a gas. Insufficiently potent to produce full anaesthesia on its own, but is rapid acting, pleasant to inhale & is the only currently used agent that is also analgesic. • Sevoflurane • Desflurane • Isoflurane all liquids that are flourinated ethers Earlier volatile agents such as ether, chloroform & halothane have been superceded due to issues such as flammability, slow recovery, & toxicity. 61 Practical Pharmacology of Inhaled Agents • Used for induction sometimes (predominantly in children) & maintenance of anaesthesia in the majority of cases - either alone, or in combination with narcotics & muscle relaxants. • Modern flourinated agents are good hypnotics, & provide a degree of muscle relaxation at high doses, but not analgesia. • In contrast, nitrous oxide is analgesic, but doesn’t decrease muscle tone, and is a poor hypnotic except at very high (i.e. hypoxic) concentrations. • The combination of a volatile agent, e.g. sevoflurane, with a 50:50 nitrous oxide/oxygen mix is a useful combination that combines the attributes of both agents. 62 Practical Pharmacology of Inhalational Agents (2) • Sevoflurane has superceded isoflurane as probably the most widely used, & has also superceded halothane as the agent of choice for inhalational induction in children. • All currently used agents have relatively low solubility in blood & tissue – meaning that their partial pressures rise & fall quickly, producing more rapid induction & emergence. • The classical stages of anaesthesia are still seen with modern agents – including the delerium phase – characterised by restlessness & risk of laryngospasm. This stage is usually seen on emergence, or with inhalational inductions in children. 63 Practical Pharmacology of Inhalational Agents (3) • Nitrous oxide, as a gas is delivered by a flowmeter (as are O2 & air – the 3 flowmeters on a typical modern anaesthetic machine). A linkage between the N20 & oxygen flowmeters stops the delivery of any mixture <25%O2. Most anaesthetic machines also only allow delivery of either N20/O2 or air/O2, not all 3 & none allow air/N2O (a hypoxic mixture). • Volatile agents are delivered by vapourisers – devices which add a precise percentage of vapour to the gas mixture. Modern vapourisers are agent specific and colour coded/labelled accordingly. They have numerous mechanisms to ensure accurate delivery, plus safety measures such as “keyed” filling systems that match only the correct bottle; and machines that can have more than one vapouriser fitted must have interlocks that prevent more than one being turned on. 64 Pharmacology 2: IV anaesthetic “induction” agents Used for: • Induction of anaesthesia • Sole agent for brief procedures • By infusion for prolonged procedures in place of inhaled agents – i.e. total intravenous anaaesthesia “TIVA” 65 Classification of intravenous agents • • • • Barbiturates – Thiopentone Benzodiazepines – Midazolam Dissociative agents – Ketamine Others- Propofol + Alpha-2 agonists – Dexmetomidine . . . maybe “the next big thing” 66 General features of IV agents • • • • Lipid soluble High volume of distribution (Vd) Initial distribution to VRG Offset of (initial) effect predominantly by redistribution • More complex used as infusions (complex pharmacokinetic models) 67 Propofol • • • • • • • Most widely used agent now Rapid(ish) onset & offset Shorter elimination halftime Less CVS & respiratory depression Doesn’t predispose to laryngospasm ED50 for induction: ~ 2 mg/kg Suitable kinetics for infusion 68 Other IV agents • • • • • • • THIOPENTONE First widely used agent Rapid onset & initial offset by redistribution Long elimination halftime CVS & resp depressant Laryngospasmogenic ED50: ~ 5mg/kg Still used for RSI “The correct dose of thiopentone is enough” (and no more!!) MIDAZOLAM • Low CVS & resp depressant • Anxiolytic, good initial adjuvant agent, not often used as sole agent • • • • • KETAMINE “Dissociative” agent Phencyclidine derivative Cardiorespiratory stimulant (in vivo) Maintains airway reflexes Analgesic in subanaesthetic doses “The disaster anaesthetic” 69 Total intravenous anaesthesia “TIVA” • Not practical until introduction of propofol , with its short elimination half life, meaning minimal accumulation with infusion. • Usually target controlled infusion using computerised algorithm in syringe pump software. Operator enters patient weight, age, & desired blood level. • Often used in combo with remifentanil & cisatracurium infusions for long cases (these also have good kinetics for use by infusion). 70 TIVA –good & bad Advantages • Good for cases of long or uncertain duration • Less effects on CBF & ICP than volatile agents • Less likely to cause PONV then either volatiles or N2O. • • • • Disadvantages Long setup time More expensive Multiple syringe pumps required No direct measure of blood or effect site concentration 71 Pharmacology 3: Narcotic Analgesics & Acute Pain Management A Definition of Pain: “An unpleasant localised sensory experience perceived as implying tissue damage.” May be acute or chronic 72 Classification of Analgesics • • • • • Conduction blockade Opiods Paracetamol NSAIDs & COX2s Miscellaneous agents • Complementary/Non pharmacological 73 An opiod is a drug that exhibits agonist activity at opiate (endorphin/enkephalin) receptors. A classification of opiods includes: • Opiates (naturally occuring constituents of opium) & their derivatives: e.g. morphine, codeine, diamorphine (heroin) • Synthetic opiods e.g. pethidine, fentanyl cogeners, oxycodone • Partial agonists e.g. pentazocine “Fortral”, buprenorphine N.B. This classification does not include the narcotic antagonists e.g. naloxone “Narcan” & naltrexone; however these are closely related, being n-allyl substituted derivatives (hence their names)of opiods 74 Properties of opiods • Analgesia Spinal ( μ/κ) & supraspinal (μ) • • • • • • Respiratory depression Sedation/euphoria (addiction potential) Emesis Depression of GI motility Pruritis Neuraxial route predominantly Urinary retention } No difference in respiratory depression between equi-analgesic doses of any narcotic agonists 75 So the differences between opiods are less in their analgesic efficacy than in: • • • • • • • Onset Duration Potency/dose Histamine release Autonomic effects Chest wall rigidity Effective routes of administration 76 Routes of administration of opiods: • Intravenous: (a) Boluses – titrated to effect – e.g recovery pain protocol (b) Infusions – require close monitoring due to potential for overdose as narcotic requirements fall away. (c) PCA – now widely used. Intrinsically safer than infusions, plus positive psychological effect of patient knowing they are in control. • Neuraxial - Epidural or intrathecal (spinal) – usually in combination with regional anaesthesia, but may also be stand alone technique for postoperative analgesia. Risk of late onset respiratory depression if agent migrates into intracranial CSF in significant amount (highest with morphine, but this is also the longest acting) • IM/SC – decreasing importance with availability of PCA & better oral agents, & multimodal therapy. • Oral – variable bioavailability: e.g. oxycodone high, morphine ~ 15% due to first pass metabolism. • Sublingual(buprenorphine) /Intranasal(fentanyl) – lipid soluble agents fairly rapidly absorbed & this route avoids first pass effect (& injection) • Transcutaneous – e.g. fentanyl patches for chronic pain 77 Problems with opiods • • • • • • Respiratory depression/cough suppression Abuse/addiction potential Tolerance Accountability/access/supply Nausea & vomiting Constipation 78 Multimodal analgesia options • • • • Regional/local blockade (if possible) Paracetamol NSAID or COX2 Basal opiod (e.g. oxycontin); or tramadol (or both) • prn or PCA opiod • Other Clonidine or ketamine 79 Pharmacology 4: Neuromuscular blockers • Purely paralysing agents – no analgesic or hypnotic activity. • Two types based on modes of action: Depolarising (Suxamethonium) Versus Nondepolarising (NDNMBs, several agents) 80 Why use paralysing drugs at all? • Permit procedures at a lighter plane of anaesthesia – hence less CVS depression – Intubation & ventilation – Surgery • Permit IPPV without interference • Lower airway pressures by increasing chest wall compliance. • Lower O2 consumption in critical periods 81 Properties of NMBDs • • • • • • • Highly polar molecules Low VD ( ~ ECF volume) Do not cross BBB/placenta Renally excreted (with exceptions) Range of actions at other ACh receptors Histamine releasers (most) Decrease VO2 /ATP & heat production 82 “Sux” versus the NDNMBDs Suxamethonium Nondepolarisers • Rapid onset (30s) • Fasciculations • Transient rise in ICP, IOP, IAP/IGP, K+. • Rapid offset (usually) • Slower onset (3-7m) • No fasciculations • Little to no effect on ICP, etc. • Varying durations with different drugs • OK for prolonged use by boluses or infusion by hydrolysis in plasma • Unpredictable effects in repeat dosing 83 Nondepolarising relaxants First generation * Curare/tubocurarine * Alcuronium * Metocurine Gallamine # Pancuronium “Modern” agents # Vecuronium • Atracurium • cisAtracurium # Rocuronium • Mivacurium * = curare derivatives # = aminosteroids (the “oniums”) • = benzisoquinolines (the “uriums”) 84 Side effects of suxamethonium • • • • • • • Myalgia MH trigger Masseter spasm Phase II block Raises ICP Raises IOP Bradycardia – Usually in infants or with 2nd dose • Raises serum K+ • Exaggerated action & K+ rise in denervation, burns, muscle injury • Prolonged action with pseudochlinesterase variants/deficiency. • Histamine release • Anaphylaxis (1:5000) 85 Problems with nondepolarisers • • • • • • • Slow onset – not usually a major problem Slow offset (situation/agent dependant) Awareness Hypothermia –reduced heat production Autonomic side effects Interactions Failure to reverse/recurarisation 86 Paralysis obviously mandates controlled ventilation • Modern anaesthetic machines are all equipped with ventilators. • Usual mode is volume controlled (delivers a set size of breath, a set number of times a minute) with or without PEEP. • Most can also give, or be adapted to give, pressure controlled ventilation, which is the mode of choice for paediatric patients (who usually have uncuffed tubes, and hence a small leak). 87 The Physiology of Controlled Ventilation “Spontaneous ventilation sucks; Controlled ventilation blows” • Maintains constant minute volume & enables titration to desired pCO2 – vital in neurosurgery & acidotic patients. • Uptake of volatile agents therefore usually higher than in spontaneously breathing patient -> more CVS depression. • Recruits alveoli & prevents collapse: minimises shunt. • Raises mean intrathoracic pressure – & hence RAP, so reduces venous return & cardiac output – especially in head up position & with pneumoperitoneum – e.g. laparoscopic cholecystectomy. • Risk of barotrauma – esp. w/high tidal volume or pressures. 88 Pharmacology 5: Local anaesthetic agents • Local anaesthetics are membrane stabilisers that block depolarisation in nerves • Non specific blockers of: – All sensory fibres (not just pain) – Motor fibres – Autonomic fibres (mainly sympathetics in most blocks) • Hence can produce analgesia & arreflexia in the distribution of the nerves blocked. • Lower concentrations of LA agents effect predominantly smaller axons: pain (Aδ & C fibres), temperature, & autonomic (unmyelinated sympthetic post-ganglionic fibres) 89 “Your friendly local anaesthetic molecule” Think of a person standing in the water – keeping their head high & dry H+ N A- • Head: benzene ring (lipophilic) • Body: (intermediate chain) with either ester or amide link. • Tail: (feet) – hydrophilic due to tertiary nitrogen capable of accepting proton & rendering molecule water soluble. (This is the form it is in in the ampoule) 90 “The voyage of the molecule Lignocaine” ECF ICF Sodium channel Lignocaine hydrochloride injected N H+ N ClTissue buffering H+ Lower intracellular pH leads to reionization HCO3- H+ N N H2O + CO2 Freebase lignocaine diffuses across cell membrane 91 Understand this, and you will know: • Why local anaesthetics sting on injection (because of the low pH needed to maintain ionised state) • Why their onset of action is not immediate (because of the buffering/diffusion/reionisation steps) • Why local anesthesia is poorly effective in inflamed/ infected tissue (because of the lack of buffering capability in acidotic tissue) • Why LAs exhibit tachyphylaxis (exhaustion of buffering capability) (& why cocaine users end up needing nose reconstructions – from repeated insult to the nasal septum from an acid substance that is also a vasoconstrictor - which inhibits circulatory dilution of the acid load) 92 Local Anaesthetic Agents AGENT Max dose: Plain (& +Adr) Lignocaine (“Xylocaine”) Bupivicaine (“Marcain”) Ropivicaine (“Naropin”) Levobupivicaine (“Chirocaine”) Prilocaine (Citanest”) 4 (7) mg/kg 2 mg/kg 3-4mg/kg 2-4 mg/kg 7(9) mg/kg 93 Local Anaesthetic Problems • Failed block • High block (spinals/epidurals) • CNS toxicity – at high dose or with inadvertent IV injection • Selective cardiotoxicity (bupivicaine) • Needle/injection trauma – Nerve damage – Other – e.g pneumothorax 94 Adjuvant agents used with LAs • Adrenaline – prolongs blockade, allows increased dose (lignocaine/prilocaine) • Bicarbonate – Enhanced buffering speeds onset of block • Hyaluronidase –Aids diffusion (Eye & brachial plexus blocks) • Glucose (spinals) – to produce hyperbaric solutions • Narcotics (neuraxial) – synergistic analgesia • Other analgesics – e.g clonidine in neuraxial blocks. 95 Modes of Local Anaesthesia (a) Peripheral • Surface – Topical (incl EMLA) – Nebulised – Intrapleural/peritoneal • Infitration • Intravenous regional • Nerve/plexus blocks – Multiple types (b) Neuraxial • Epi(extra)dural – – – – Single shot vs catheter Bolus vs infusion LA only vs combinations Includes caudal blocks • Spinal/subarachnoid – Usually single shot – LA only or LA/narcotic • Combination (CSE) 96 Some common nerve/plexus blocks • Eye blocks: Peribulbar, retrobulbar, Sub-Tenons • Superficial cervical plexus block • Brachial plexus blocks: Axillary, supraclavicular, interscalene • Paravertebral blocks • Intercostal blocks • Ilio-inguinal block • Dorsal penile nerve block • Pudendal nerve block • Femoral (+/- LCNT) block • Ankle blocks 97 Spinal Anaesthesia • • • • Relatively quick, defined end-point for placement Small volume of LA Usually single shot – “fire & forget” Block level depends on spread – varies with: – Volume – Speed of injection – Baricity • Minimal respiratory effects – unless high block • Autonomic effects: - Vasodilatation @ T12 & up - Bradycardia @ T4 & up 98 Epidural Anaesthesia • • • • • • Alone, GA/epidural, or CSE. Cervical (rare), thoracic, lumbar, caudal Usually catheter placement (except caudal) High volumes LA +/- adjuvants. “Band” phenomenon. Autonomic effects similar to spinal, but slower onset 99 Considerations in regional blockade • • • • • • Consent/communication IV access Adjuvant sedation/analgesia Time involved Failed block/backup plan Management of side effects/reactions 100 Part VI: Sub-specialty Anaesthesia 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. INCLUDES: Paediatrics Obstetrics Cardiothoracic ENT/Head & neck Neurosurgery 101 Subspecialty Anaesthetics A: Paediatric “They’re not just small adults” . . . But . . . “Nor are they all just big neonates, either” 102 Adult-Paediatric Differences • Psychosocial • CNS • Respiratory – Airway – Other • Cardiovascular • Renal/fluids • • • • • • • Gastrointestinal Hepatic/metabolic Endocrine Haematological Immunological Musculoskeletal Integument 103 The Psychosocial Dimension • There are (almost) always two patients – child and parent(s). If you don’t keep the parents happy, or at least reassured, the child won’t be either – no matter how good the anaesthetic. • Children don’t understand that you are there to help – only that you are a stranger. • Children hate needles. Parents hate their children having needles. Even without this, cannulation can be difficult. Anything that ameliorates this is good: premeds, EMLA, inhalational inductions. • Parental presence at induction can be a good idea – as long as the parent is going to cope. If in doubt, a generous premed & a goodbye outside may be a better option. 104 Anatomical Differences 1 • Body proportions – Head larger – especially occiput – Limbs smaller Increased surface area to volume ratio • CNS differences Brain & spinal cord relatively larger 105 Anatomical Differences 2: Airway • Nares (relatively) larger • Larynx higher C3 in neonate -> C6 in adult • Epiglottis longer (& softer) • Cricoid ring narrowest part of airway 106 Respiratory Physiology • Chest wall mechanics & tracheobronchial tree “floppier”. • Tidal volume/dead space same as adults in mls/kg • Respiratory rate & minute volume higher • FRC similar to adult in mls/kg, but vO2 higher, so desaturate more quickly when apnoeic. • Control of respiration immature till ~ 15/12 post conceptual age – up till then vulnerable to apnoeas – especially post GA &/or narcotics. 107 Cardiovascular Physiology • Fetal circulation • Postnatal transition • Haemodynamics • Autonomic control 108 Blood & body fluids • Blood volume 80-90 mls/kg (adult ~ 70) • Birth Hb 180-200 g/L (adult 120-160) – Falls to ~ 110 @ 6/12 then rises. • Fetal haemoglobin (HbF) – Different chains – Lower p50 (Hb-O2 curve shifted left) – 75% of Hb at birth minimal @ 6/12. • Body water 75-80% in neonate (adult 65%) • ECF compartment larger than ICF – (crossover @ ~ 4/12) 109 Temperature • • • Infants at higher risk of hypothermia Higher surface area to volume ratio Remember the four modes of heat loss: 1. 2. 3. 4. Conduction Convection Radiation Evaporation All four occur more when the surface area to volume ratio is higher 110 Heat production & regulation • Controlled in hypothalamus • Balances heat loss & heat production • Heat production – Shivering – Metabolic thermogenesis (brown fat) • Thermoneutral environment; – Point of minimum O2 consumtion – e.g. for unclothed term baby is ~ 33°C 111 Subspecialty Anaesthetics B: Obstetrics Remember, once again you have two patients – but this time they are physically connected 112 Principles • Pregnancy is a normal, but vulnerable condition. • The prregnant patient is different • Delivery is hazardous • Operative intervention may be required • Labour & delivery can be agonisingly painful • Anaesthesia inevitably has (at least some) foetal effects/implications. 113 Differences in Pregnancy • Psychosocial • CNS • Respiratory – Airway – Other • Cardiovascular • Renal/fluids • • • • • • • Gastrointestinal Hepatic/metabolic Endocrine Haematological Immunological Musculoskeletal Integument 114 Drugs & the Placenta General rule: If it crosses the blood brain barrier, it crosses the placenta! Placental transfer: Narcotics/Sedatives/GA agents - HIGH Muscle relaxants -Essentially nil Local anaesthetics – Significant (in freebase form) . . . but peak maternal plasma levels usually post delivery 115 Scenarios • Analgesia for labour • Anaesthesia for operative delivery – Emergency – Semiurgent – Planned • Anaesthesia for post partum complications • Neonatal resuscitation 116 Analgesic options • Inhalational – N2O as Entonox (50:50 N20/O2) or via blender (up to 70% N2O – Caution!) • Narcotics – IM/SC prn – pethidine favoured by midwives – Infusions – not often used – PCA – remifentanil drug of choice. • Epidural – usually initial bolus then either: (a) Infusion [&/or] (b) bolus top-ups [or] (c) PCEA • Other regional/local blocks – e.g. pudendal block for second stage. 117 Anaesthetic Options for Caesarean Section • • • • General Regional • Technique of choice for Spinal vs Epidural emergency LSCS Spinal quicker – – Fastest unless epidural already – Better in hypovolaemia in situ & only needing • Riskier for mother on top-up. raw figures, but: Most mothers want to – GA population includes be awake. failed regionals & most Beware the failed or emergency cases. patchy block. – So are we comparing apples to oranges? No difference (surprisingly) in foetal outcomes between GA &118RA Subspecialty Anaesthetics C/D: Cardiothoracic & ENT What do these surgical disciplines have in common? 119 Remember the basic rules: 1. Air goes in & out 2. Blood goes round & round 3. Variations on this are a BAD THING . . . BUT (you knew there had to be a “but” somewhere, didn’t you) . . . ENT, thoracic, & cardiac anaesthetics all require some flexibility of these rules! 120 Anaesthetic A to E in ENT/Oral Surgery • Airway - shared with surgeon • Bleeding – even a small amount into the airway is a BAD THING • Children – predominant patient population • Disruptions – of the airway - always a risk • Extubation strategies: – Deep versus awake 121 Airway Management Options in ENT/Oral Surgery • • • • • • • None (!) Venturi ventilation Nasal tubes RAE tubes MLT tubes Laryngeal masks (yes!) Subglottic airway i.e tracheostomy 122 Anaesthetic Factors in Thoracic Surgery • • • • Open thorax – mandates IPPV +/- PEEP Pre existing lung disease Lung isolation requirements Intraoperative hypoxia (lung isolation by definition creates a major shunt) • Postoperative issues – Respiratory support – Analgesia 123 Lung separation techniques: For “one lung anaesthesia” • Endobronchial intubation (deliberate not inadvertent!) • Double lumen ET tubes • Bronchial blockers • Other (generally bodgie) methods 124 Anaesthetic Factors in Cardiac Surgery • Cardiopulmonary bypass • Cardiopulmonary bypass! • Cardiopulmonary bypass!! (Scary, scary, scary stuff) 125 Cardiopulmonary bypass (“CPB”) for dummies • Pump plus oxygenator (“Heart lung machine”) • Cardioplegia (High K+ solution to cause cardiac standstill) • Hypothermia (Enables prolonged ischaemic times) 126 Problems with CPB • Non-pulsatile flow – can cause paradoxical circulatory responses • Hypothermia/pH issues – What is the right pH in hypothermia to maintain acid base status? • Red cell trauma – from pump rollers impellers, & (especially “bubble” type) oxygenators • Cardiac restarting/Weaning from bypass • Post CPB syndrome – confusion & cognitive impairment, sometimes long-term or permanent. 127 Other Anaesthetic Factors in Cardiac Surgery • Pre-existing cardiac disease – well, obviously! • Co-morbidities - high incidence CVD, PVD, diabetes, renal impairment, etc. • Concurrent medications – likely to be multiple • Monitoring – In patient on CPB: there is no ECG, pulse (oximetry), conventional BP, or expired CO2 there to monitor. Can monitor MAP generated by bypass, ABGs, & BIS/entorpy 128 Subspecialty Anaesthetics E: Neurosurgical It’s not rocket science . . . . . . but it is brain surgery 129 Special considerations in neurosurgical anaesthesia: • Airway – secure, as access to it intraoperatively may be impossible. • Breathing - may need to manipulate CO2 to control intracranial pressure/volume. • Circulation - maintain appropriate BP for desired cerebral perfusion pressure • Disability & Exposure - special positioning may be required – e.g. sitting or prone, all of which carry particular risks. 130 Part VII: Emergencies, Complications & Problems. Anaesthetic Emergencies Anaesthesia for emergencies Emergencies from (or during) anaesthesia 131 A: Emergency Anaesthesia • • • • • • • Obstetrics Trauma Gen. Surgical Vascular Neuro-surgical/-radiological Cardio-thoracic Threatened airway 132 Considerations in Emergency Anaesthesia First: How much of an emergency is it, really? Then: • Airway assessment • Cardio-respiratory status • Full stomach/fasting status • Pre-existing medical conditions • Medications/allergies Assessment may itself be difficult because of haste, patient compromise, etc. 133 Emergency Anaesthesia – Management Principles • Assessment • Management plan/scheduling • Stabilisation & preparation – If time permits • Pain management • Then (& only then) commencement of anaesthesia 134 Emergency Anaesthesia: Maintenance • Includes ongoing resuscitation & Rx • Monitoring: More not less • Postanaesthetic management plan? 135 B: Anaesthetic Emergencies & Complications “BIG ONES” • • • • • • • Arrest Anaphylaxis Failure to intubate Ventilator disconnect Laryngospasm/NPPO Aspiration Nerve damage • • • • • • • “Little ones” Agitation/delerium Sore throat PONV Pain Urinary retention Atalectasis Cognitive dysfunction 136 Post Operative Nausea & Vomiting (PONV) “The Big Little Problem” • Still affects up to 30% of patients. • Major subjective concern – studies suggest most patients prefer pain to N&V. • Most common cause of prolonged recovery stay, & delayed discharge in daystay patients • Multifactorial: – Patient factors: ♀ > ♂; Non smoker > smoker. – Surgical: High incidence in eye, ENT, & gynaecological laparoscopic surgery. – Anaesthetic: Narcotics, volatile & N2O all potentially emetic 137 Treatment approach to PONV Prevention is better than cure General • Identify at risk patient – Anaesthetic history • Identify & ameliorate precipitant if possible – e.g. narcotics General supportive Rx – IV hydration, – narcotic sparing multimodal analgesia – Consider TIVA Antiemetic agents: • HT3 blockers - e.g. ondansetron. Pre-emptive or reactively. • Dexamethasone – mode of action unknown. Most effective premptively. • Dopamine antagonists – e.g. droperidol. Good for narcotic related N&V • Others: - Anticholinergics – Antihistamines/phenothiazines – Prokinetics – metoclopramide 138 Anaesthetic Risk In Perspective Risk of anaesthetic death (due to the administration of the anaesthetic) < 1:50,000 No paediatric anaesthetic deaths in Australia in the last reported quinquennium. Typical healthy elective surgical patient probably at more risk of death or serious injury from car trip to/from hospital 139 The figures are good but may lead to: • Overconfidence amongst anaesthetists • Complacency by surgeons & under-appreciation of risk of coexisting disease factors (which do kill patients). • Targetting for cost cutting measures by politicians & managers with consequent shaving of safety margins. 140 The Eternal Triangle (In all health services, not just anaesthetics) QUALITY QUANTITY Pick any two! ECONOMY (And if one of these is economy, are you sure it’s not a false economy?!) 141 The Bottom Line • Safe anaesthesia may not directly prevent the patient dying of the disease. • It will however help prevent them dying of the treatment. • Think as a potential surgeon: Isn’t this what you want for your patient? • Think as a health consumer: Isn’t this what you want for yourself or your family? 142 The End If you have any questions about the course material, or about anaesthesia as a potential career choice, feel free to contact me: [email protected] 143