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Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

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Page 1: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Anesthetic management of

maxillofacial surgery

By:

Alaa Samir El KatebLecturer of anesthesia and intensive care

Ain Shams university

Page 2: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Objectives:

- Preoperative airway assessment.

- Learn how to perform awake intubation.

- How to draw a fluid chart.

- What is massive blood transfusion and its

complications.

- Know complications and prevention of

hypothermia.

Page 3: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Le fort classificationTransverse crossing

floor of nose, separating of the palate from the

maxilla.

Fracture of maxilla, where body of the maxilla is

separated from the facial skeleton (pyramidal in

shape)

The entire maxilla and one or more facial

bones are completely separated from the craniofacial skelton

Page 4: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Anesthetic consideration

Airway management (intubation &

extubation)

Blood loss

Hypothermia

Eye protection

Page 5: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Airway management

!

Page 6: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Airway Anatomy

Page 7: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Airway assessment

1- HISTORY: *Rheumatoid - *Morbid obese

*Submandibular abscess *Retropharyngeal abscess

*Neoplasm, Radiation, *Scleroderma

*Previous tracheostomy *Prolonged intubation

*Bleeding lesions *Syndroms e.g. Down

*Mandibular, maxillary &/or cervical spine fractures

*History of difficult intubation

Page 8: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Cont. Preoperative airway evaluation

2- PHYSICAL EXAMINATION:

Thick , short & muscular neck

Receding or hypoplastic mandible

Edentulous, prominent incisors

High arched palate, large tongue

Presence of ear or hand deformities

Page 9: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Cont. Preoperative airway evaluation

Hyomental distance: 2 fingers

Thyromental distance: 6.5 cm

Mouth opening: (TMJ) 3-4 cm

Neck Movement: 35 degree flexion at

lower cervical and 80 degree

extension at atlanto-occipital

Page 10: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Cont. Preoperative airway evaluation

Mallampati’s : sitting, vocalizing, tongue protruded

Page 11: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

- Cormack and Lehane scale

The vocal cordsvisible

The vocal cordspartially visible (posterior commissure)

Only epiglottisEpiglottisNot seen

Page 12: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

El-Ganzouri risk index+0 +1 +2

Mouth opening cm ≥4 <4

Thyromental distance cm >6.5 6-6.5 <6

Mallampati class I II III-IV

Neck movement >90° 80°-90° <80°

Ability to prognath Yes no

Body weight Kg <90 90-110 >110

History of difficult intubation none ?? yes

Page 13: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Awake intubation

preparation

Page 14: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Innervation of nasal, oropharyngeal & laryngeal

cavitiesNasal/Nasopharyngeal Cavity –Trigeminal Nerve (CN V)

Oropharynx-Glossopharyngeal Nerve (CN IX)

Larynx & Trachea – Branches of the Vagus Nerve (CN X)

Page 15: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

I. Anesthesia of the Nasal Mucosa and Nasopharynx(Sphenopalatine ganglion and

ethmoid nerve) - Lidocaine + epinephrine or lidocaine + phenylephrine

- Long cotton-tipped applicators: 1st: 45 degree to the hard palate 2nd: parallel to the dorsal surface of the nose

- Left in place for 5 minutes

- Should be done bilaterally

Page 16: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

II. Anesthesia of the mouth, oropharynx

and base of tongue (Glossopharyngeal & superior

laryngeal nerves) - Lidocaine gel on tongue blade and

patient "sucks“. Peak on set 15 min.

OR Lidocaine can be placed in a

nebulizer for 5-7 min

OR The tongue and posterior pharynx

are sprayed with the atomizer.

Page 17: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Glossopharyngeal nerve

block

Page 18: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Superior laryngeal nerve block

Page 19: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

III. Anesthesia of the hypopharynx, larynx and

trachea Transtracheal block (RLN)

Page 20: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

After anesthetizing the airway you may use:

Direct laryngoscopy

Blind intubation

Retrograde intubation

Fiberoptic intubation

PLEASE

Maintain spontaneous breathing

Page 21: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

ctrachcombitube

ILMA

COPA

Page 22: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

LMA_supreme2

AIRtraq

glidescope video assessted

Page 23: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

TruView

Page 24: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Nasal intubation

- Vasoconstrictor 30-45 minutes earlier.

- Insert ETT parallel to hard palate.- Bevel is medial (turbinates are lateral)

- During blind nasal:

_ Introduce the ETT during inspiration

_ You may use capnography

Page 25: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Fiberoptic bronchoscopy- May turn to be an emergency situation.- If to be used, use it as the first choice.- Pull the tongue forward, jaw thrust.- Put the patient in sitting position.- Keep the midline against hard palate.- You may dim room light and use it as illuminating stylet.

Page 26: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Retrograde intubation

Page 27: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

- For nasal intubation!!

Page 28: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Submental intubation

Page 29: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Safe extubation

“air leak test” is done to evaluate whether or not the patient is capable of breathing spontaneously

You may use a hollow introducer or a tube-exchanger, bronchoscope or NGT

Page 30: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university
Page 31: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university
Page 32: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Blood loss

Page 33: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

- Wide pore canula / central venous access

Fluid therapy

Deficit

Hourly maintenance * fasting hours

Maintenance

- 4 cc/Kg for 1st 10 weight- 2 cc/Kg for 2nd 10 weight- 1 cc/Kg for remaining weight

Losses- Ryle- UOP- Bleeding- 3rd space loss

Page 34: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Gross’s simplified formulaAllowable blood loss =[(Starting Hct – target Hct) / Starting Hct]X Estimated blood volume.

Estimated blood volumeAdults: 65-75 cc/kgInfants: 80 cc/kgNeonates: 85 cc/kg

Newborn: 100-120 cc/Kg

Amount to be transfuse (ml)=[Target haemaglobin – Current haemaglobin]X 4 X weight (kg)

Page 35: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Massive blood transfusion

American Association of Blood Banks definition:

10 units of blood in 24 hrs

or 5 units of blood in 4 hrs

Page 36: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Complications of massive blood transfusion

1- Coagulopathy: At least 1.5 times blood volume to become a clinical problem.

2- Hypothermia.

3- Citrate toxicity: > unit/5 min

4- Hyperkalemia

Page 37: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Hypothermia

Page 38: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Complications of hypothermia:1- Arrhythmia: PVC (<30°C) – VF (<28°C)

2- ↓ O2 delivery to tissues: O2 dissociation curve, VC, ↑ blood viscosity.3- ↓ GFR and UOP stops at 20°C4- ↑ blood viscosity, ↑ rouleaux formation, coagulopathy (depressed clotting mechanism and platelets function).5- Metabolic acidosis.6- Post-operative shivering.

Page 39: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

How to prevent?

- ↑ ambient air temperature.

- Humidify inspired air

- Warm mattress

- Plastic or cotton wraps

- Warm fluids

Page 40: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Eye protection

Page 41: Anesthetic management of maxillofacial surgery By: Alaa Samir El Kateb Lecturer of anesthesia and intensive care Ain Shams university

Any questions??

THANK YOU