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General General Anesthesia Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

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Page 1: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

General General AnesthesiaAnesthesiaAnesthesiology Lecture SeriesSurgery Module Level III

Page 2: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Lecture OutlineLecture Outline

I. Principles of General AnesthesiaII. Pharmacology in General

AnesthesiaIII. Conduct of General AnesthesiaIV. Complications of General

Anesthesia

Page 3: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

General AnesthesiaGeneral Anesthesia

“General Anesthesia is a drug-induced loss of consciousness during which patients are not arousable, even by painful stimulation. The ability to independently maintain ventilatory function is often impaired. Patients often require assistance in maintaining a patent airway, and positive pressure ventilation may be required because of depressed spontaneous ventilation or drug-induced depression of neuromuscular function. Cardiovascular function may be impaired.”

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CONTINUUM OF DEPTH OF SEDATION: DEFINITION OF GENERAL ANESTHESIA AND LEVELS OF SEDATION/ANALGESIA*. Approved by ASA House of Delegates on October 13, 1999, and amended on October 27, 2004

Page 4: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Minimal SedationAnalgesia

Moderate Sedation (Conscious Sedation)

Deep Sedation

(Anxiolysis)

General Anesthesia / Analgesia

Responsiveness Normal response to verbal stimulation

Purposeful response to verbal or tactile stimulation

Purposeful response following repeated or painful stimulation

Unarousable even with painful stimulus

Airway Unaffected No intervention required

Intervention may be required

Intervention often required

Respiratory Function

Unaffected Adequate May be inadequate Frequently inadequate

Cardiovascular Function

Unaffected Usually maintained Usually maintained May be impaired

CONTINUUM OF DEPTH OF SEDATION: CONTINUUM OF DEPTH OF SEDATION: DEFINITION OF GENERAL ANESTHESIA AND DEFINITION OF GENERAL ANESTHESIA AND LEVELS OF SEDATION/ANALGESIA* LEVELS OF SEDATION/ANALGESIA*

Approved by ASA House of Delegates on October 13, 1999, and amended on October 27, 2004

Page 5: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Stages of General Stages of General AnesthesiaAnesthesiaStage 1 (amnesia)

◦ From induction of anesthesia to loss of consciousness (loss of eyelid reflex)

◦ Pain perception threshold is not lowered.

Stage 2 (delirium/excitement) ◦ Characterized with uninhibited excitation, agitation,

delirium, irregular respiration and breath holding◦ Pupils are dilated and eyes are divergent◦ Responses to noxious stimuli: vomiting,

laryngospasm, hypertension, tachycardia, and uncontrolled movements

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Morgan, et al. Clinical Anesthesiology, 4th ed. 2006Ezekiel. Handbook of Anesthesiology, 2005

Page 6: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Stages of General Stages of General AnesthesiaAnesthesiaStage 3 (surgical anesthesia)

◦ characterized by central gaze, constricted pupils, and regular respirations

◦ Painful stimulation does not elicit somatic reflexes or deleterious autonomic responses.

Stage 4 (impending death/overdose) ◦ characterized by onset of apnea, dilated and

nonreactive pupils, and hypotension◦ may progress to circulatory failure

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Morgan, et al. Clinical Anesthesiology, 4th ed. 2006Ezekiel. Handbook of Anesthesiology, 2005

Page 7: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Principles of General Principles of General AnesthesiaAnesthesiaMinimum Alveolar Concentration (MAC)

◦ the minimum concentration necessary to prevent movement in 50% of patients in response to a surgical skin incision

◦ The lower the MAC, the more potent the agent

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Morgan, et al. Clinical Anesthesiology, 4th ed. 2006Ezekiel. Handbook of Anesthesiology, 2005AnesthesiaUK.com

Summary of physical properties of volatile anestheticsHalothane Isoflurane Enflurane Desfluran

eSevoflura

neMolecular weight 197 184 184 168 200 Boiling point (°C) 50.2 48.5 56.5 22.8 58.5 Saturated vapor pressure at 20°C

243 238 175 669 157

MAC in 100% O2

0.75 1.15 1.8 6 2.05

% Biotransformation

20 0.2 2 <0.1 3 - 5

Blood / gas 2.2 1.36 1.91 0.45 0.6 Oil / gas 224 98 98.5 28 47

Page 8: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Minimum Alveolar Minimum Alveolar ConcentrationConcentrationMAC awake

concentrations required to prevent eye opening on verbal command (50% MAC)

MAC Endotracheal Intubation

Concentrations required to prevent movement and coughing in response to endotracheal intubation (130% MAC)

MAC BAR

Concentrations required to prevent adrenergic response to skin incision (Blockade of autonomic response) (150% MAC)

MAC Amnesia

concentration that blocks anterograde memory in 50% of awake patients (25% MAC)

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Morgan, et al. Clinical Anesthesiology, 4th ed. 2006Ezekiel. Handbook of Anesthesiology, 2005

Page 9: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Minimum Alveolar Minimum Alveolar ConcentrationConcentrationFactor that increase/decrease

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Page 10: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Meyer-Overton HypothesisMeyer-Overton Hypothesis The MAC of a volatile

substance is inversely proportional to its lipid solubility (oil:gas coefficient)◦ High MAC equals low

lipid solubility

Backtrack: ◦ MAC is inversely related

to potency (high MAC equals low potency)

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Page 11: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Meyer-Overton HypothesisMeyer-Overton Hypothesis Correlation between lipid

solubility with potency ◦ onset of anesthesia occurs

when sufficient molecules of the agent have dissolved in the cell's lipid membranes

◦ High lipid solubility equals high potency (and low MAC)

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Summary of physical properties of volatile anestheticsHalothan

eIsofluran

eEnfluran

e Desfluran

eSevoflura

neMolecular weight 197 184 184 168 200 Boiling point (°C) 50.2 48.5 56.5 22.8 58.5 Sat’d vapor pressure 20°C

243 238 175 669 157

MAC in 100% O2 0.75 1.15 1.8 6 2.05 MAC in 70% N2O 0.29 0.56 0.57 2.5 0.66 % Biotransformation 20 0.2 2 <0.1 3 - 5Blood / gas 2.2 1.36 1.91 0.45 0.6

Oil / gas 224 98 98.5 28 47

Page 12: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Meyer-Overton HypothesisMeyer-Overton HypothesisFactors Affecting the Meyer - Overton

Hypothesis Convulsant properties

◦ Halogenation results in decreased anesthetic potency and

appearance of convulsant activity

Specific Receptors ◦ e.g. opioid receptors

◦ there is reduction of MAC by opioids

Dexmedetomidine◦ an alpha-2- agonist, results in marked reduction in MAC

Hydrophilic site of action◦ correlation between ability to form clathrates and anesthetic potency

◦ Clathrates (of water) are postulized to alter membrane ion transport

Page 13: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

II. OVERVIEW OF II. OVERVIEW OF PHARMACOLOGIC AGENTS PHARMACOLOGIC AGENTS USED IN GENERAL USED IN GENERAL ANESTHESIA ANESTHESIA

• Inhaled Anesthetics• Intravenous induction Agents• Neuromuscular Blocking Agents• Opioids• Benzodiazepines• Anticholinergic agents • Anticholinesterases

Page 14: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Inhalational AgentsInhalational Agents Used in the induction and

maintenance of anesthesia Halogenated alkane or ether-

derived compounds Nitrous oxide (N2O; laughing gas)

is the only inorganic anesthetic gas in clinical use

Produce dose-dependent systemic effects

Associated with Malignant Hyperthermia

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Examples:Ether HalothaneMethoxyfluraneEnfluraneIsofluraneSevofluraneDesfluraneNitrous OxideXenon

Page 15: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Inhalational AgentsInhalational AgentsAgent Adverse Systemic EffectsNitrous Oxide Alters methionine synthetase production;

polyneuropathy, teratogenic effects

Chloroform Hepatic toxicity; fatal cardiac arrhythmia

Halothane Associated in hepatitis, malignant hyperthermia

Methoxyflurane

Fluoride nephrotoxicity

Enflurane Induce epileptiform EEG changes

Isoflurane Coronary steal

Sevoflurane Compound A found to be nephrotoxic

Desflurane Produces more Carbon monoxide with reaction to CO2 absorbentP

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Morgan, et al. Clinical Anesthesiology, 4th ed. 2006Ezekiel. Handbook of Anesthesiology, 2005Townsend, et al. Sabiston, Textbook of Surgery, 17th ed. 2004

Page 16: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Intravenous Induction Intravenous Induction AgentsAgentsUsed as premedications, sedatives,

intravenous induction agents and in the maintenance of anesthesia.

Total intravenous anesthesia (TIVA)

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Morgan, et al. Clinical Anesthesiology, 4th ed. 2006Ezekiel. Handbook of Anesthesiology, 2005Townsend, et al. Sabiston, Textbook of Surgery, 17th ed. 2004

Examples:Barbiturates (Thiopental)Benzodiazepines (Midazolam)KetamineEtomidatePropofol

Page 17: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Intravenous Induction Intravenous Induction AgentsAgentsThiopental

◦ REVIEW: Redistribution◦ Hepatic elimination◦ Can cause hypotension, vasodilation and cardiac

depression ◦ Can precipitate bronchospasm in patients with

reactive airway disease

◦ Decreases CMRO2 in neuroanesthesia

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Morgan, et al. Clinical Anesthesiology, 4th ed. 2006Townsend, et al. Sabiston’s Textbook of Surgery, 17th ed. 2004www.3dchem.com

Page 18: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

www.3dchem.com

Intravenous Induction Intravenous Induction AgentsAgentsKetamine

◦ Produces dissociative state of anesthesia

◦ Only IV induction agent that increases blood pressure and heart rate

◦ Decreases bronchomotor tone◦ May be used as sole anesthetic for

short procedures◦ Produces profound amnesia and

analgesia◦ Increases intracranial pressure◦ Produces emergence delirium and bad

dreams

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Morgan, et al. Clinical Anesthesiology, 4th ed. 2006Townsend, et al. Sabiston’s Textbook of Surgery, 17th ed. 2004

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Page 19: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Intravenous Induction Intravenous Induction AgentsAgentsPropofol, (2,6-diisopropylphenol)

◦ Short-acting induction agent◦ Available as oil-in-water emulsion

containing soybean oil, glycerol, and egg lecithin

◦ Ideal for ambulatory surgery◦ Can decrease blood pressure in

susceptible patients◦ Produces bronchodilatation◦ Associated injection pain

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Morgan, et al. Clinical Anesthesiology, 4th ed. 2006Townsend, et al. Sabiston’s Textbook of Surgery, 17th ed. 2004

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Page 20: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Intravenous Induction Intravenous Induction AgentsAgents Etomidate

◦ Imidazole compound◦ Produces minimal hemodynamic changes

(ideal for patients with cardiovascular disease)

◦ Produces pain on injection, abnormal muscular movements and adrenal suppression

Midazolam◦ A benzodiazepine (Other BZD: Diazepam, Lorazepam)◦ Because of minimal cardiovascular effects,

used for anesthesia induction◦ Produces anxiolysis and profound amnesia◦ Also used as a premedicant

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Morgan, et al. Clinical Anesthesiology, 4th ed. 2006Townsend, et al. Sabiston’s Textbook of Surgery, 17th ed. 2004

www.bedfordlabs.com

www.bedfordlabs.com

Page 21: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

OpioidsOpioidsUsed as part of general anesthesia, and in

patients receiving regional anesthesiaProduces profound analgesia and minimal

cardiac depressionCause ventilatory depressionExamples: (REVIEW CLASSIFICATION OF OPIOIDS AND

RECEPTORS)

◦ Agonists: Morphine, Fentanyl, Meperidine◦ Antagonists: Naloxone ◦ Agonist-Antagonist: Nalbuphine, Butorphanol

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Morgan, et al. Clinical Anesthesiology, 4th ed. 2006Townsend, et al. Sabiston’s Textbook of Surgery, 17th ed. 2004

Page 22: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

OpioidsOpioidsUses in General Anesthesia

◦ Reduces MAC of potent inhalational agents◦ Blunt the sympathetic response (increase in BP and

HR) to direct laryngoscopy, intubation and surgical incision

◦ Provide analgesia extending into postoperative period◦ May be used as complete anesthetics (may provide

analgesia, hypnosis and analgesia)◦ May be added in local anesthetic solutions in regional

anesthesia to improve quality of analgesia

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Townsend, et al. Sabiston’s Textbook of Surgery, 17th ed. 2004

Page 23: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Neuromuscular Blocking Neuromuscular Blocking AgentsAgents

Uses in anesthesia: Facilitates endotracheal intubation Provides muscle relaxation necessary for the

conduct of surgery

◦ Types: (Review Pharmacology) DEPOLARIZING (non-competitive) AGENTS

Succinylcholine: mimics the action of acetylcholine by depolarizing the postsynaptic membrane at the neuromuscular junction (non-competitive antagonism)

NON-DEPOLARIZING Produces reversible competitive antagonism of Ach Maybe aminosteroid or benzylisoquinoline compounds

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Morgan, et al. Clinical Anesthesiology, 4th ed. 2006Townsend, et al. Sabiston’s Textbook of Surgery, 17th ed. 2004

Page 24: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Neuromuscular Blocking Neuromuscular Blocking AgentsAgents

◦ Advantages of Succinylcholine◦ Rapid onset, short duration of action◦ Used in rapid-sequence induction

◦ Adverse effects of Succinylcholine◦ Bradycardia (esp. in pediatrics)◦ Life-threatening hyperkalemia in burn patients◦ May trigger malignant hyperthermia Myalgia (from fasciculations) and myoglobinuria Increased ICP, CBF, IOP Increased intragastric pressure Prolonged blockade in susceptible individuals (in

decreased plasma cholinesterase activity, myopathies)

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Morgan, et al. Clinical Anesthesiology, 4th ed. 2006Townsend, et al. Sabiston’s Textbook of Surgery, 17th ed. 2004

www.buyemp.com

Page 25: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Neuromuscular Blocking Neuromuscular Blocking AgentsAgents◦ Nondepolarizing Agents

◦ Used when succinylcholine is contraindicated◦ Choice of agent

◦ Based on mode of excretion◦ Hoffman degradation (atracurium, cis-atracurium)◦ Renal◦ Hepatic

◦ Based on duration of action◦ Short acting: Mivacurium◦ Intermediate: Atracurium, Rocuronium◦ Long-acting: Pancuronium

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Morgan, et al. Clinical Anesthesiology, 4th ed. 2006Ezekiel. Handbook of Anesthesiology, 2005Townsend, et al. Sabiston, Textbook of Surgery, 17th ed. 2004

Page 26: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Neuromuscular Blocking Neuromuscular Blocking AgentsAgents◦ Concerns in anesthesia

◦ Paralysis can mask signs of inadequate anesthesia

◦ Higher doses required for intubation than for surgical relaxation

◦ Other drugs can potentiate effects of non-depolarizing agents

◦ Variable individual responses◦ Residual blockade may result to postoperative

problems◦ TOF monitoring◦ Clinical assessment

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Morgan, et al. Clinical Anesthesiology, 4th ed. 2006Ezekiel. Handbook of Anesthesiology, 2005Townsend, et al. Sabiston, Textbook of Surgery, 17th ed. 2004

Page 27: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

AnticholinergicsAnticholinergicscompetitively inhibits the action of

acetylcholine at muscarinic receptors with little or no effect at nicotinic receptors.

Examples:◦ Atropine*, Scopolamine§, Glycopyrrolate¤

Uses in anesthesia:◦ Amnesia and Sedation§

◦ Antisialogogue effect §*¤

◦ Tachycardia* ◦ Bronchodilation*

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Morgan, et al. Clinical Anesthesiology, 4th ed. 2006Ezekiel. Handbook of Anesthesiology, 2005Townsend, et al. Sabiston, Textbook of Surgery, 17th ed. 2004

www.ci.springfield.or.us

Page 28: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

AnticholinesterasesAnticholinesterases Inactivate acetylcholinesterase by reversibly binding

to the enzyme increasing the amount of acetylcholine available to compete with the nondepolarizing agent

Increases acetylcholine at both nicotinic and muscarinic receptors

Muscarinic side effects can be blocked by administration of atropine or glycopyrrolate

Examples: edrophonium, neostigmine, pyridostigmine, physostigmine

Use in anesthesia: reversal of neuromuscular blockade

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Morgan, et al. Clinical Anesthesiology, 4th ed. 2006Ezekiel. Handbook of Anesthesiology, 2005Townsend, et al. Sabiston, Textbook of Surgery, 17 th ed. 2004

www.comparestoreprices.co.uk

Page 29: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

GENERAL GENERAL ANESTHESIAANESTHESIA

• Induction Techniques• Intubation• Maintenance• Emergence and Extubation

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Page 30: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Patient Monitoring in Patient Monitoring in AnesthesiaAnesthesiaRoutine Pulse oximetry Automated BP ECG Capnography Oxygen analyzer Ventilator pressure

monitor Thermometry

Specialized Foley catheter Arterial catheter Ventral venous catheter Pulmonary artery

catheter Precordial doppler Transesophageal

Echocardiography Esophageal Doppler Esophageal and

Precordial Stethoscope

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Townsend, et al. Sabiston, Textbook of Surgery, 17 th ed. 2004

Page 31: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Airway ExaminationAirway ExaminationMallampati Score

◦ The patient is asked to maximally open his mouth and protrude his tongue while in the sitting position

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Class 1 Faucial pillars, uvula, soft palate seen

Class 2 Uvula masked by tongue base

Class 3 Only soft and hard palate visualized

Class 4 Only hard palate

Page 32: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Airway ExaminationAirway Examination Interdental Distance (3)

◦ Measures the distance between the 2 incisors, with the mouth fully opened

Thyromental Distance (3)◦ Measures the distance

between the chin (mentum) and the thyroid cartilage

Thyrohyoid Distance (2)◦ Measures the distance

between the hyoid and the thyroid cartilage

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kvyouth.blogspot.comwww.unige.ch

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Page 33: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Airway ExaminationAirway ExaminationBellhouse-Dore

◦ maximal flexion and extension of the neck will identify limitations that might prevent optimal alignment of the OPL axes.

Normal atlanto-occipital joint: 35 degrees of extension

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Page 34: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Strategies in General Strategies in General AnesthesiaAnesthesia Questions to ask prior to conduct of anesthesia:

◦ Is the patient’s condition or scheduled surgery require additional monitoring techniques?

◦ Does the patient have conditions that contraindicate certain drugs

◦ Is endotracheal intubation required?◦ Are there anticipated difficulties in oral translaryngeal

intubation?◦ Are NMBs required during surgery?◦ Are there special surgical requirements that mandate use of

or avoidance of specific interventions? (e.g. NMBs)◦ Is substantial blood loss or fluid shifts anticipated?

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Townsend, et al. Sabiston, Textbook of Surgery, 17 th ed. 2004

Page 35: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Induction of AnesthesiaInduction of AnesthesiaSequence of interventions during induction

vary depending on the patient and type of surgery

Concerns◦ Loss of consciousness◦ Inability to maintain a natural airway◦ Reduction or cessation of spontaneous ventilation◦ Use of drugs that may depress the myocardium and

change vascular tone

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Townsend, et al. Sabiston, Textbook of Surgery, 17 th ed. 2004

Page 36: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Awake IntubationAwake Intubation May be supplemented with

sedatives, opioids, and topical or local anesthesia

Accomplished via “blind” nasal, fiberoptic bronchoscopy, and direct visualization

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Indications:•inadequate mouth opening•facial trauma•cervical spine injury•chronic cervical spine disease•lesions in the upper airway

Page 37: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Awake IntubationAwake IntubationNasal Intubation

◦ Endotracheal tube (ET) is inserted through the nose and guided into the tracheal by listening to the transmitted breath sound

Fiberoptic intubation◦ Passing an ET through the nose or

mouth into the pharynx, then passing a bronchoscope through the tube. The larynx and the trachea are visualized and the ET is thread over the bronchoscope

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Townsend, et al. Sabiston, Textbook of Surgery, 17 th ed. 2004

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Page 38: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Intravenous InductionIntravenous InductionPreoxygenation with 100%

oxygen

+/- IV opioid or BZD

Administration of rapid-acting IV induction agents

Anesthesiologist ensures patient can be manually

ventilated

Yes? Patient is given NMB

Direct Laryngoscopy and Intubation

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Townsend, et al. Sabiston, Textbook of Surgery, 17 th ed. 2004

tumj.tums.ac.ir

Page 39: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Intravenous InductionIntravenous InductionDisadvantages

◦ Spontaneous ventilation is abolished without certainty that patient can be manually ventilated

◦ Endotracheal intubation is performed while the patient is lightly anesthetized, precipitating hypertension, tachycardia, or bronchospasm

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Page 40: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Inhalational InductionInhalational InductionPreoxygenation (100% O2)

O2 + Volatile agent via face mask

Anesthesiologist ensures patient can be manually

ventilated

Direct Laryngoscopy and Intubation

General Anesthesia via Face Mask

• In children (induction)• In patients at severe risk

of bronchospasm• Short Procedures• Difficult airway

Yes? Patient is given NMB

+/- IV opioid or BZD

OptionOption

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Page 41: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Inhalational InductionInhalational Induction May be used in children

and cooperative adults Disadvantages

◦ Depending on the induction agent, patients progress from the awake state to surgical level of anesthesia.

◦ Stage 2 anesthesia prodispose the patient to laryngospasm, vomiting and aspiration

Agents used for Inhalational induction: ◦ Sevoflurane◦ Halothane

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www.cuhk.edu.hk

Page 42: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Rapid Sequence InductionRapid Sequence Induction Indicated for patients at

high risk for acid aspiration Examples

◦ Obese patients◦ Pregnant patients◦ History of

gastroesophageal reflux disease

◦ Patients with bowel obstruction

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Townsend, et al. Sabiston, Textbook of Surgery, 17th ed. 2004

Sellick’s Maneuver: pressure on the cricoid cartilage to occlude the esophagus, thus preventing passive regurgitation from the stomach to the pharynx

www.johnshopkins.org

Page 43: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Rapid Sequence InductionRapid Sequence InductionPreoxygenation (100% O2)

Administration of rapid-acting IV induction agents*

Succinylcholine IV

Direct Laryngoscopy and Intubation*

SELLICK’S MANEUVER*

Patient is NOT ventilated

Confirm ET placement

Cricoid Pressure Removed

Other concerns: Consequences of difficult intubation and hypoxia

3-person* technique

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Townsend, et al. Sabiston, Textbook of Surgery, 17th ed. 2004

www.ispub.com

Page 44: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Combined intravenous and Combined intravenous and inhalational anesthesiainhalational anesthesia

Agents are combined to gain advantage of smooth and rapid hypnosis but still permit establishment of deep level of inhalational anesthesia prior to airway instrumentation

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Page 45: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Combined Intravenous and Combined Intravenous and Inhalational AnesthesiaInhalational Anesthesia

Preoxygenation (100% O2)

+/- IV opioid or BZD

Administration of rapid-acting IV induction agents

Anesthesiologist ensures manual ventilation

Direct Laryngoscopy and Intubation

Anesthesiologist deepens anesthesia with O2 + Volatile agent (+ N2O) via face mask

Yes? Patient is given NMB

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Townsend, et al. Sabiston, Textbook of Surgery, 17th ed. 2004

Page 46: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Techniques in Managing Techniques in Managing Airway ObstructionAirway Obstruction Chin tilt Extension of neck Anterior displacement of

mandible Use of airway adjuncts (oral and

nasal airway) Use of supraglottic airway (e.g.

LMA)

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www.charlydmiller.com

www.mdconsult.com

Review 2nd Year Airway Management Lectures

www.shilog.com

medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.comwww.cuhk.udu

Page 47: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Orotracheal Intubation Orotracheal Intubation TechniqueTechnique

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Barash, et al. Clinical Enesthesiology,2006www.emedicine.com

Position the Patient

Open the mouthInsert the laryngoscope bladeSweep the tongue from right to left

Identify landmarks

Advance the laryngoscope blade

www.medgear.org

Identify and elevate the epiglottis

Visualize the vocal cords and glottic openingemsresponder.com

Sniffing PositionPads and Pillows

Macintosh blade: valleculaMiller blade: epiglottis

Page 48: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Orotracheal Intubation Orotracheal Intubation TechniqueTechnique

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Insert the endotracheal tube from the corner of the mouth

Advance the tube into the glottic opening

Withdraw laryngoscope bladeVentilateConfirm tube placement

Inflate ET balloon cuff

Secure the endotracheal tube

www.dhmc.org

services.epnet.com

Periodically check tube

Page 49: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Confirmation of Successful Confirmation of Successful Endotracheal IntubationEndotracheal Intubation

Direct visualization of the ET tube passing though the vocal cords.

Carbon dioxide in exhaled gases (documentation of end-tidal CO2 in at least three consecutive breaths).

Maintenance of arterial oxygenation. Bilateral breath sounds. Absence of air movement during

epigastric auscultation. Condensation (fogging) of water vapor in

the tube during exhalation. Refilling of reservoir bag during

exhalation. Chest x-ray: the tip of ET tube should be

between the carina and thoracic inlet or approximately at the level of the aortic notch or at the level of T5.

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Morgan, et al. Clinical Anesthesiology, 4th ed. 2006Ezekiel. Handbook of Anesthesiology, 2005

www.vet.uga.edu

www.capnography.comwww.chmeds.ac.nzwww.sai.net.inwww.ispub.com

Page 50: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Maintenance of Maintenance of AnesthesiaAnesthesiaGoals

◦ Facilitate surgical exposure◦ Ensure adequate amnesia◦ Ensure adequate analgesia

Parameters used in assuring adequacy of anesthesia:◦ Autonomic signs (BP, HR, RR)◦ Monitoring of Neuromuscular Blockade◦ BIS Monitoring (for awareness)

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Page 51: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Maintenance of Maintenance of AnesthesiaAnesthesia

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TITRATABLE COMBINATION OF:•IV opioids (e.g. fentanyl)•IV sedative-hypnotics (e.g. midazolam)• O2+volatile agent• Nitrous oxide

NITROUS-NARCOTIC TECHNIQUE:•IV opioids•IV sedative-hypnotics• O2+ Nitrous oxide

TOTAL INTRAVENOUS ANESTHESIA: (TIVA) •IV sedative-hypnotics (e.g. propofol) via infusion or TCI• IV short-acting opioids+ NMBs (in patients requiring intubation/muscle relaxation)

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Page 52: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Emergence and Emergence and ExtubationExtubation“ Emergence and extubation requires the

knowledge and experience with the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic principles that underlie the elimination of inhalational and intravenous agents and that govern the reversal of neuromuscular blockade.”

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Page 53: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Emergence and Emergence and ExtubationExtubationParameters for Extubation:

◦ Patient follows commands◦ Active spontaneous respiration◦ Ability to protect the airway (reflexes)

Deep extubation◦ Used in patients at risk for

bronchospasm with stimulation of the trachea during emergence from anesthesia

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Page 54: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Criteria for ExtubationCriteria for Extubation awake and responsive patient stable vital signs reversal of paralysis good hand grip sustained head lift for five seconds Negative inspiratory force > -20 mmHg vital capacity >15 ml/kg

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Morgan, et al. Clinical Anesthesiology, 4th ed. 2006 www.pbase.com

Other Concerns: Aspiration riskAirway patency

Page 55: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Subjective Clinical Criteria:◦ Follows commands

◦ Clear oropharynx/hypopharynx (e.g., no active bleeding, secretions cleared)

◦ Intact gag reflex

◦ Sustained head lift for 5 seconds, sustained hand grasp

◦ Adequate pain control

◦ Minimal end-expiratory concentration of inhaled anesthetics

Objective Criteria:◦ Vital capacity: ≥10 mL/kg

◦ Peak voluntary negative inspiratory pressure: >20 cm H2O

◦ Tidal volume >6 cc/kg

◦ Sustained tetanic contraction (5 sec)

◦ T1/T4 ratio >0.7

◦ Alveolar-Arterial Pao2 gradient (on FIO2 of 1.0): <350 mm Hga

◦ Dead space to tidal volume ratio: ≤0.6a

Barash, Clinical Anesthesiology, 2006

Page 56: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

COMPLICATIONS OF COMPLICATIONS OF GENERAL GENERAL ANESTHESIAANESTHESIA

Page 57: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Complications of General Complications of General AnesthesiaAnesthesia

INDUCTION Individual variable response to drugsDepression of the CNS / respiratory / cardiovascular systemsHypersensitivity reactions

Problems in Ventilation:•Hypoxemia•Hypercarbia•Obstruction •Difficult ventilation

Aspiration

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Page 58: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

INTUBATION

Tracheal Tube Positioning•Endobronchial Intubation•Esophageal Intubation•Inadequate insertion depth

Physiologic Responses•Hypertension, Tachycardia•Laryngospasm•Bronchospasm

Airway Trauma•Injury to teeth and airway tissues•Tracheal and laryngeal trauma•Post-intubation hoarseness and sore throat•Difficult intubation

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www.resuscitations.in

www.telemedi.net

www.studioshanks.com

www.learningradiology.com

www.worldsmiles.com

Page 59: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

MAINTENANCE Individual Variable responseHypersensitivity reactionsDepression of the CNS / respiratory / cardiovascular systemsInadequate depth of anesthesiaAwareness

EXTUBATION

AspirationLaryngospasmAirway traumaResidual Neuromuscular BlockadeDelayed Emergence

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www.wilyoth.comwww.pbase.com

Others Peripheral Nerve PalsiesCorneal Abrasions

Page 60: General Anesthesia Anesthesiology Lecture Series Surgery Module Level III

Good Day!