Friday, 25 October 2019

Unintended intraoperative awareness in Anesthesia


Incredibly rare, affecting an estimated 1 in every 19,000 patients undergoing general anesthetic. Because of the muscle relaxants given alongside anesthesia, patients are unable to signal to their surgeon or anesthetist that they are still aware of what is happening.
Local anesthesia is another option. It is given before minor surgeries, such as removal of a toenail. This reduces pain sensations in a small, focused areas of the body, but the person receiving the treatment remains conscious. Regional anesthesia is another type. This numbs an entire portion of the body - the lower half, for example, during childbirth. There are two main forms of regional anesthesia: Spinal anesthetic and epidural anesthetic. Spinal anesthetic is used for surgeries of the lower limbs and abdomen. This is injected into the lower back and numbs the lower body. Epidural anesthesia is often used to reduce the pain of childbirth and lower limb surgery. This is administered to the area around the spinal cord through a small catheter instead of a needle injection.
Pre-surgical evaluation:
Before general anesthesia is administered, patients will have a pre-surgery assessment to determine the most appropriate drugs to use, the quantities of those drugs and in which combination.
Stages:
Modern anesthetics and updated delivery methods have improved the speed of onset, general safety, and recovery, but the four stages remain essentially the same:
·        The period following a loss of consciousness, characterized by excited and delirious activity. Breathing and heart rate becomes erratic, and nausea, pupil dilation, and breath-holding might occur.
·         Because of irregular breathing and a risk of vomiting, there is a danger of choking. Modern, fast-acting drugs aim to limit the time spent in stage 2 of anesthesia
·         surgical anesthesia: vomiting stops, Muscles relax and breathing is depressed. Eye movements slow and then cease. The patient is ready to be operated on
·         Too much medication has been administered, leading to brain stem or medullary suppression. This results in respiratory and cardiovascular collapse.
·         The anesthetist's priority is to take the patient to stage 3 of anesthesia as quickly as possible and keep them there for the duration of the surgery.

How does general anesthetic work?
The exact mechanisms that conspire to produce the state of general anesthesia are not well known. The general theory is that their action is induced by altering the activity of membrane proteins in the neuronal membrane, possibly by making certain proteins expand.

Of all the drugs used in medicine, general anesthetics are an unusual case. Rather than a single molecule acting at a single site to produce a response, there is a huge variety of compounds, all of which generating quite similar but widespread effects, including analgesia, amnesia, and immobility.


Friday, 13 September 2019

Does Anesthesia lowers IQ before 3rd Birthdays of Children


New research finds no indication that children administered anesthesia before their third birthdays have lower IQs than those who did not have it. A more multifaceted picture emerges among people who had anesthesia several times as small children: Although their intelligence is comparable, they score modestly lower on tests measuring fine motor skills, and their parents are more likely to report behavioral and learning problems. Memory, Intelligence, and several other measures of brain function that are similar among the groups.

However, those with multiple exposures to anesthesia had modest declines in fine motor skills, such as the ability to draw figures with a pencil, and how quickly they processed information when reading. Their parents reported more learning and behavioral problems, such as difficulty reading; behaviors consistent with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder; breaking rules; or displaying aggression, anxiety or social withdrawal.

Parents whose children had anesthesia once under age 3 reported more problems with mental skills known as executive functions -- skills that help with memory, impulse control, planning, and flexibility -- but not with other behaviors. Infants who undergo surgery, results overall are reassuring children who are receiving multiple anesthetics, it's important to note that our results don't allow us to accomplish that anesthesia itself.

In the intervening time, most cases the benefit of surgery outweighs any risk. However, the capacity for problems may need to be part of the decision-making process when parents and surgeons discuss surgery.

Mostly it gets initiated by the following factors:

  •         Deep Anesthetic level with adequate muscle relaxation and blunting response to intubation
  •          No hypoxia
  •          No coughing

There are ethical problems of carrying out high-quality studies in pediatrics but important findings on the prevention of anesthetic neurotoxicity; minimizing intraoperative blood loss, intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring, examining optimal doses and choices of anesthetic agents.

Friday, 28 June 2019

General Anesthesia: A Cutting edge of treatment in pediatric patients




Rapid growth of population is very dynamic as it depends upon the physiologic processes that undergoes drug disposition and rapid changes in pediatrics. Pharmacological consideration requires the specifications in pediatric patients. During administering general anesthesia to children, the surgeons should have a brief knowledge on pharmacologic, physiological differences between the adults and infants.
General Anesthesia
The immediately before, during, and after surgery (perioperative period) immediately is a critical time for pediatric patients. Medications provides a blunt physiologic response and render patients unaware of what is being done to or around them. The increased risk for mortality and morbidity in the perioperative period demands the utmost vigilance. Such risks may be increased in certain disease states. The purpose of general anesthesia is to suppress the conscious perception of, and physiologic response to, noxious stimuli and to render the patient unconscious.
Phases of Anesthesia are:
·         Preanesthetic Phase
·         Induction Phase
·         Maintenance Phase
·         Reversal Phase
Preanesthetic Phase: Numerous classes of medications can be given to children as anticholinergics, histamine blockers, sedatives, analgesics,) during the preanesthetic phase. The phase ensures that the patient arrives in the operating room in a relaxed manner, calm without compromised breathing or impaired cardiovascular status.
Induction Phase: General anesthesia is induced with either inhalation or intravenous (IV) medications. In most instances, the volatile anesthetic agents are preferred in children over IV medications because they do not require IV access. IV medications are used to induce anesthesia in children only in rare circumstances mostly in case of hyperthermia.
Maintenance Phase: This phase is the period between induction and emergence. During this time, the child should be asleep, hemodynamic responses to painful stimuli, and homeostatically supported Neuromuscular blockers are used during muscle paralysis is needed.
Reversal Phase: The volatile inhalation agents rapidly leave the lungs during ventilation and thus do not require other products to reverse their actions.

The above phases are administered for the treatment in infants and pediatric patients.

Friday, 14 June 2019

Is Oral surgery a safety precaution for Dental Management??


Drugs controlling pain, some help to, and while others put into a deep sleep-like state during dental treatment that is termed as dental anesthesia. Local anesthesia is a specific kind of medication prescribed for the prevention of pain in specific area of mouth during the treatment procedure by blocking nerves or transmitting the pain that numbs

the tissues of mouth.
Anesthetics are used topically in painful soothing and mouth sores. Injectable anesthetics are useful in filling cavities, preparing teeth for crowns and treating gum disease. Local anesthetics are classified into maxillary anesthesia and mandibular anesthesia.
Maxillary Anesthesia:
Local anesthesia is deposited at the buccal (cheek) side of the maxillary alveolus which can diffuse through the thin cortical plate of the maxilla, then further into the pulp of the tooth in order to achieve dental anesthesia effect.
Mandibular Anesthesia:
Both infiltration techniques regional block is considered the first-choice injections for anaesthetizing the mandibular teeth.
Different techniques are chosen depends upon different factors:
·         Patient age
Infiltration anesthesia is the preferable method to anesthetize deciduous/ primary teeth in children. The method is like the maxillary buccal infiltration. Ensure the lip/ cheek is stretched in a lateral and inferior direction instead of superiorly and the needle is then penetrated 45’ with the buccal cortical plate of the bone through the taut tissue of the mucco-buccal fold.
·         Tooth to be anesthetized
Infiltration anesthesia should be the first choice of method for pulpal and soft tissue anesthesia of mandibular permanent incisors in adults. Regional block injections are sometimes ineffective due to crossover innervation from the opposite side of inferior alveolar nerve. It is recommended to deposit at least 0.5mL at each buccal and lingual site in the apical region of the tooth of interest. The use of infiltration anesthesia with 4% articaine with 1:100,000 epinephrine in obtaining pulp anesthesia of the mandibular permanent first molar is getting more common these days due to its successful formulation.


Friday, 7 June 2019

Does Atrial fibrillation after surgery poise a risk?


Post-operative atrial fibrillation (POAF) often is sacked as a transient phenomenon. POAF can significantly increase the risk of stroke and heart attack during the first 12 months after surgery. In bladder cancer patients undergoing a cystectomy i.e., removal of bladder they experience near about 30% of stroke and patients that are aware of POAF they might experience a stroke within a year of surgery.
The postoperative atrial fibrillation is vigilant, transient and establishes the risk of cardiovascular morbidity. Atrial fibrillation is defined as a rapid and irregular heartbeat which decreases the flow to the body. Patients having chronic A-fib are posed to have higher risks of heart failures. Combinations of New onset Postoperative Atrial Fibrillation predicts the long-term cardiovascular events followed by Radical Cystectomy. In order to identify these results several rectal operations to be handled in a proper manner to optimize the best results.
Risks:
Heart attack is a death segment of a heart muscle caused by a loss of blood supply. Blood is cut off when an artery supplying heart muscle is blocked by a blood clot.  It is aroused with the indication of chest pain and electrical instability of heart muscles. Heart attacks are fatal, and it is vital and necessary to recognize the warning signs during the attack. These can be cured by surgical treatments. Surgery of heart is termed as cardiac anesthesia.
Stroke usually occurs when the supply of blood is either reduced or interrupted or reduced. It happens when the brain does not get enough nutrients, oxygen and the brain cells tend to die. It is classified into three types:
Hemorrhagic stroke: It is a result of arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) due to rupture of a weakened blood vessel
Ischemic Stroke: A blood clot prevents oxygen and blood from reaching the brain.
Transient ischemic attacks (TIAs): Also known as mini stroke, it occurs after blood fails to reach the part of brain.

Thursday, 16 May 2019

Sedation and Analgesia: A procedural Technique


This technique involves the use of analgesic, sedative and the dissociative drugs to provide sedation, analgesia and anesthetics, anxiolysis, and motor control during unpleasant diagnostic and therapeutic procedures. Progression from sedation to general anesthesia does not cause an arbitrary division by itself. Sedative hypnotics and opioids induce a mild sedation and analgesia along with the adverse events. Increase in the dose provides sedation for a longer time and a high risk of airway and respiratory distress.
The practice of procedural sedation and analgesia has three sequences /methods: presedation assessment, sedation for the procedure, and postprocedure recovery and discharge.
Sedation falls under the following categories:
Minimal Sedation: the state of anxiolysis, although having cognitive function and coordination might be impaired, ventilatory and cardiological functions remain unaffected.
Moderate Sedation: A drug induced depression of consciousness having tactile stimulation. The withdrawal of reflex from painful stimulus to maintain a patent airway.
Dissociative sedation: It is induced by drug like   ketamine which is characterized by profound amnesia and analgesia with the retention of airway flexus, cardiopulmonary stability and spontaneous respirations.
Deep sedation: Induced depression along with consciousness. The ability to independently maintain ventilatory function could be impaired.
State of altered consciousness resulting in euphoria, amnesia and relaxation. Moderate sedation is a state of depression that is minimized by drugs allowing the protection for reflexes is to be maintained. Patient independently regulates patient airway and responds to the stimulation.