Perioperative Issues - University of Toronto
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Transcript Perioperative Issues - University of Toronto
Perioperative Issues
Dr John Oyston
Dept of Medicine Rounds
April 15th 2008
Intro
Thanks for invitation and for consults
Caring for same patients, different times
Often not much chance to exchange
views
Perioperative literature widely scattered
Ideally, we should all be on same page
Case Presentation
67 year old man
Booked for PVP Green Light Laser
MI x 2, CABPG (5 yr ago), restenosed
Good exercise tolerance, rare angina
No other medical conditions
On maximum cardiac meds including
ASA and Plavix
? What to do about these drugs preop
Topics
Anesthesia’s 2007 Mortality review
Stop Smoking for Safer Surgery
AHA SABE Guidelines
ACC/AHA Perioperative Guidelines – a
Canadian anesthesia perspective
Discussion
Perioperative Deaths 2007 (QCIPA)
Data collection difficult
One intraoperative death and 12 deaths
within 48 hours, out of 11,314 surgeries.
Death rate 1.15/1,000, lowest in years
UK 7-8/1000 in 30 days
1:185,000 due to anesthesia
France – 7 anesthesia deaths per million
Patient characteristics
10/13 over 70 years old (youngest 52)
12/13 were emergencies
12/13 were ASA 4 or 5
10 cases ortho or general
5 were spinals
Standards were met. Deaths due to
progression of disease or co-morbidities
Intraoperative Death
Bleeding Jehovah’s Witness
Anticoagulated
Gynecological malignancy
Refused blood or FFP
Research data from JWs:
Hb>8g/dl and loss <500 ml ->100% live
Hb<6g/dl ->62% die
Template
6 – 8 hours of
non-smoking
reduces CO
levels
“NPO after MN”
“No smoking after
Midnight”
Why quit?
Endocarditis Prophylaxis
New AHA Guidelines
Circulation, Oct 9 2007 p 1736
IE rarely caused by operative procedure
Risk of antibiotics often outweighs benefits
Severely restricts both surgical procedures
and cardiac disease indications for antibiotic
prophylaxis
ACC/AHA 2007 Perioperative
Evaluation and Care Guidelines
Circulation Oct 23 2007, p 1971
Very worthy and well thought-out review
of large and complex issue
Little anesthesia involvement
American authors
Needs a Canadian anesthesiology
perspective
Preoperative ECG
Guidelines state:
Preoperative ECGs are not indicated in
asymptomatic persons undergoing low-risk
surgical procedure.
Ontario Pre-Operative Testing Grid
recommends ECG even in asymptomatic
persons over 45
This is our current policy
? May not be needed for cataract surgery
Motherhood statements
Maintain normothermia
Maintain euglycemia
Take a history
Assess functional capacity
Poor if cannot climb stairs, walk at 4 mph,
do light housework (4 METs)
Base risk assessment on history,
physical and lab
Lee’s Revised Cardiac Risk Score
One point for each of:
Ischaemic Heart Disease
Congestive Heart Failure
Cerebrovascular Disease
High-Risk Surgery
Thoracic, Vascular, Abdominal or Ortho
IDDM
Creatinine >177 mmol/l
Major Cardiac Complication Rate
Class I (no risk factors)
Class II (one risk factor)
Class III (two risk factors)
Class IV (>2 risk factors)
0.4%
0.9%
6.6%
11.0%
Perioperative Medications
Long history of searching for the “magic
bullet” which would protect patients from
the risk of surgery and anesthesia
Nitroglycerin, Beta blockers, Alpha
agonists, Statins
Need to consider intra-operative effects
Need OUTCOME data
Prophylactic Nitroglycerin OUT
Beta blockers – NOT AS GOOD AS
WE HOPED
If already on them, definitely continue.
May be of benefit in high risk cases
Use longer acting agents (eg atenolol)
Start 5-7 days before surgery, continue 30d
Titrate to HR <65
Anesthesia
Masks hypovolemia, awareness,
hypoglycemia
Bradycardia usually treatable
Alpha-2 agonists (eg Clonidine)
– ? UNDERUSED
Theory: decrease sympathetic drive,
dilate post-stenotic vessels
Meta-analysis: Reduce MI and Mortality
in vascular surgery
Prospective Trial: Reduced mortality over
2 years
2-6 mcg/kg clonidine po once, I hr preop
Not yet widely used
Statins
Stabilize plaques, decrease inflammation
Meta-analysis: 44% reduction in mortality
Need 4 – 6 weeks treatment
Sudden withdrawal dangerous
No interactions with anesthesia
Awaiting DECREASE IV trial
Stents
Becoming a huge issue
Patients with drug-eluting stents taken
off anticoagulants frequently die
Should stay on Plavix and ASA for one
year if possible
NB: Spinal anesthesia OK with ASA, but
need to be off Plavix for one week
Stents (2)
Need discussion between
cardiology, surgery and
anesthesiology – complicated
algorithms
Do we need a computer to help?
Algorithms (e.g for cardiac testing, sleep
apnoea) are getting increasingly complicated
Computers are great with algorithms – let
them do the work
Adjuvant Informatics has a suitable product in
beta testing in UHN
We could be the next test site
Thank
you.
Questions?
Thank you
Any questions?