• Der Internist · Jan 2011

    [Perioperative management of long-term medication].

    • I Vogel Kahmann, W Ruppen, G Lurati Buse, D A Tsakiris, and M Bruggisser.
    • Spitalapotheke, Kantonsspital Schaffhausen, Schaffhausen.
    • Internist (Berl). 2011 Jan 1;52(1):89-98.

    AbstractAnesthesiologists and surgeons are increasingly faced with patients who are under long-term medication. Some of these drugs can interact with anaesthetics or anaesthesia and/or surgical interventions. As a result, patients may experience complications such as bleeding, ischemia, infection or severe circulatory reactions. On the other hand, perioperative discontinuation of medication is often more dangerous. The proportion of outpatient operations has increased dramatically in recent years and will probably continue to increase. Since the implementation of DRGs (pending in Switzerland, introduced in Germany for some time), the patient enters the hospital the day before operation. This means that the referring physician as well as anesthesiologists and surgeons at an early stage must deal with issues of perioperative pharmacotherapy. This review article is about the management of the major drug classes during the perioperative period. In addition to cardiac and centrally acting drugs and drugs that act on hemostasis and the endocrine system, special cases such as immunosuppressants and herbal remedies are mentioned.

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