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Perioperative Medicine Topics •Organisational Issues •Perioperative Assessment •Preanaesthetic Assessment •Medications and Surgery •Preoperative Investigations •Patient Preparation •Post-operative care Perioperative Medicine Topics •Organisational Issues •Perioperative Assessment •Preanaesthetic Assessment •Medications and Surgery •Preoperative Investigations •Patient Preparation •Post-operative care The Iceberg of Poor Patient Preparation Conceptual Basis Patient outcomes and efficiency of care are maximised by appropriate preprocedural preparation. Avoiding adverse outcomes Avoidance of cancellations Reducing time in hospital both pre- and post-procedure. Increasing complexity of patient care, increasing comorbidities, need to address patient preferences and other patient factors, the complexity of managing the hospital system requirements, requires a system integrating all these dimensions The “Ideal” System for Surgery • • • • • • Preadmission patient assessment Selective clinic review Preadmission preparation Day of Surgery Admission Centralised Preoperative Care Centrally organised & coordinated process from booking to discharge and recovery Preoperative Assessment & Preparation System Patient Health Information ( Questionnaire, Interview, Old Records ) Triage No Clinic (Clerk/Nurse) Anaesthetist Clinic (Standard) READY Day of Surgery (Multidisciplinary) PENDING Phone Call Day Prior Day Only Clinic Inpatient Meeting the patient preoperatively General Hints Know the procedures & paperwork Look and Behave like a Professional Plan the consultation before you meet the patient. Read the patients notes First! Check with the Nurses. Introduce yourself:- your name and your purpose clearly. Call the patient Mr/Mrs/Miss, at least at first Use confirmation questions rather than interrogation Give the patient and family time to ask questions Perioperative Medicine Topics •Organisational Issues •Perioperative Assessment •Preanaesthetic Assessment •Medications and Surgery •Preoperative Investigations •Patient Preparation •Post-operative care Perioperative Medicine Topics Perioperative Assessment •What preparation is needed •What might "go wrong" •What are the procedure-specific tasks Pre- and Post-op? •What are the general tasks Pre and Post-op? •What are the indicators of higher perioperative risk •Should this patient have the operation? What is the point of patient assessment before Surgery? Identify potential to improve patient’s health status (……and manage this…) Assess the risks associated with planned procedure to enable risk/benefit assessment Modify the planned perioperative management. Identify possible undesired events or ‘complications’ that may occur perioperatively in order to plan detection and treatment of patient if they do occur. The Key Steps of the PreProcedural Process Gather Information Patient Health; Procedure; Hospital/system; Personal Collation & Documentation of Information Review Patient Health Identify potential to improve patient’s health status Optimise the Patient’s Health as much as realistically achievable in the timeframe available Analyse/Integrate (four perioperative dimensions) Assess the risks and benefits associated with planned procedure Consider alternative perioperative management options and/or procedures. Decide on perioperative management plan. Resolve conflicting requirements. Decide on plan of care Identify possible undesired events or ‘complications’ that may occur perioperatively Plan detection and treatment of ‘complications’ if they do occur. Explain/Educate Communicate plan to patient/proceduralists/theatre staff surgeon What things are assessed before Surgery? CVS Cardiac Failure; IHD; Valves; Arrythmias Exercise Capacity Respiratory Asthma/CAL; Bronchiectasis; Smoking Diabetes Cerebrovascular & other neurological Haematology Anaemia; Bleeding/Clotting disorders; Warfarin etc etc etc Balance the conflicting aims of optimising health and what is realistically achievable in the timeframe available Why does the patient’s “fitness” matter?….. What happens in the Clinic? • Patients are (ideally) seen 1-2 weeks preoperatively • Specialist Nurse review • Perioperative Medical consultation by Anaesthetist (as a ‘Perioperative Physician’) • Tests / Referral as appropriate • Postponement if necessary (surgeon notified) • Patient Education & Instruction • Warning to Procedural Anaesthetist, Theatres etc as needed. But What happens before and after the clinic visit (or instead of it) is just as important as what happens in the clinic itself Perioperative Medicine Topics •Organisational Issues •Perioperative Assessment •Preanaesthetic Assessment •Medications and Surgery •Preoperative Investigations •Patient Preparation •Post-operative care Perioperative Medicine Topics Preanaesthetic assessment •Assessment for anaesthesia • What’s the point? – (Will it change anything) •“Is this Patient Fit for Anaesthesia?” •General vs. Regional vs. Local, •ASA score •Airway Assessment Who Assess the Airway? The MOUTHS system for assessing airways Mandible Opening Uvula Teeth Head & Neck Shape/Silhouette (My personal mnemonic) The LEMON system for predicting difficult intubation • Look externally, • Evaluate the 3-3-2 • Mallampati, • Obstruction, • Neck mobility (A Different mnemonic) What is the Mallampati score? What is the Laryngoscopy view? (Cormack & Lehane Categories) Mallampati Score Cormack & Lehane Category Perioperative Medicine Topics •Organisational Issues •Perioperative Assessment •Preanaesthetic Assessment •Medications and Surgery •Preoperative Investigations •Patient Preparation •Post-operative care Perioperative Medicine Topics Medications and Surgery •Anticoagulants •Hypoglycaemics and insulin •Betablockers •Antihypertensives •Antiplatelet agents •Others Perioperative Medicine Topics •Organisational Issues •Perioperative Assessment •Preanaesthetic Assessment •Medications and Surgery •Preoperative Investigations •Patient Preparation •Post-operative care Perioperative Medicine Topics Preoperative Investigations •Blood tests •Group & Screen; Cross Matching •INR; HbA1C; Pregnancy •Radiology •ECG •Echocadiography •Myocardial Perfusion Imaging (Stress; Sestamibi, Angiography etc) •Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing (CPX or CPET) •If you think extra tests are needed:- Check with the registrar, nurses or the procedural anaesthetist. Perioperative Medicine Topics •Organisational Issues •Perioperative Assessment •Preanaesthetic Assessment •Medications and Surgery •Preoperative Investigations •Patient Preparation •Post-operative care Perioperative Medicine Topics Patient Preparation •Fasting •Appropriate fluids while fasting •Bowel prep - who needs it, what to prescribe •Skin Preparation, Shaving •DVT Prophylaxis What do I do for the patient preoperatively? Confusing Patient Preparation Issues Fasting - 3hrs water, 6hrs solids IDDM - Check BSLs, Half normal insulin. Warfarin - Omit 4/5 doses, Clexane cover for some patients Aspirin - Controversial & Confusing - check with surgeon! Clopidogrel - Withold for 7-10 days BUT NOT FOR STENTS DVT Prophylaxis – “The most overlooked part of patient care” Smoking - NRT Patches, refer to Quitline EtOH abusers - Alcohol Withdrawal Score, Refer to D&A. If in Doubt, Check! Full protocols available from Perioperative Service Postoperative Patient Care What is likely to happen to the patient postoperatively? Perioperative Medicine Topics •Organisational Issues •Perioperative Assessment •Preanaesthetic Assessment •Medications and Surgery •Preoperative Investigations •Patient Preparation •Post-operative care Perioperative Medicine Topics Post-operative care •Appropriate fluids in context of surgery/blood loss •When to transfuse •Analgesia - PCA's and nerve infusions •Post-op tests •When to restart preop medications that have been stopped. What is going to happen to the patient postoperatively? Procedure-specific Issues Specific monitoring, therapy or other care tasks, and ‘specific’ complications related to the particular procedure that has been performed General Postoperative Management Monitoring, therapy, and care tasks that may be encountered in any patient having surgery “Complications” Response to problems/complications What is going to happen to the patient postoperatively? General Postoperative Patient Care • ‘Normal’ response to surgery • Stress Response; Systemic Inflammation • Observations • Vitals signs; Pain; Mental status; Emotions etc • ‘Fluid & Electrolytes • Maintenance; Replacement of losses; “third space loss” • Thromboprophylaxis • A major preventable cause of hospital deaths • Chronic Medications • Maintain most medications – some are critical! • Pain Management • Optimise:- Multimodal strategies & The analgesic ladder • Discharge & Convalescence • Patient Expectations and Systematic Organisation What is going to happen to the patient postoperatively? • “Complications” • Respiratory • Atelectasis, Infection, Respiratory Failure • Cardiovascular • Dysrythmias, LVF; Myocardial Ischaemia; AMI • Mental Status • Confusion & Delirium (treat and find the cause!) • Renal Function • Observations; ??Cause??? • Infection • Local or systemic; May be insidious • Gastrointestinal • PONV; Bowel obstruction; feeding • etc etc etc • “More harm is done when you do not look than by not knowing what is in the book” What are the Hot Topics in Perioperative Medicine? • Intravenous Fluids • Too much Salt; Colloids; IV Access; Goal-Directed Fluid Therapy; GIFTASUP • Blood • Antiplatelet agents; Transfusion Triggers; Iron therapy; Patient Blood Management • Checklists etc; ERAS programs • Integrity of Process as a major determinant of outcome • “Failure to Rescue” • MET Failures; DETECT; Between the flags etc. Emergency Response Systems • Critical Care Access • Triage by biomarkers or CPET; ICU Outreach; HDU Resources; Alternative Models of Critical Care • Patient Preparation • Patient selection; Identification of futility; Prehabilitation; Appropriate expectations; Active Recovery Any Questions?