• Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Aug 2001

    Anaesthesia for procedures in the intensive care unit.

    • M Chollet-Rivier and R L Chioléro.
    • Anesthesiology Department, CHUV, Lausanne, Switzerland. Madeleine.Chollet-Rivier@chuv.hospvd.ch
    • Curr Opin Anaesthesiol. 2001 Aug 1; 14 (4): 447-51.

    AbstractTaking in charge severely ill patients in the intensive care environment to manage complex procedures is a performance requiring highly specific knowledge. Close collaboration between anaesthetists and intensive care specialists is likely to improve the safety and quality of medical care. Three forms of anaesthetic care should be considered in clinical practice: sedation and analgesia; monitored anaesthetic care; and general anaesthesia or conduction block anaesthesia. Even in the field of sedation and analgesia, the anaesthesiologist can offer expertise on new anaesthetic techniques like: the most recent concepts of balanced anaesthesia in terms of pharmacokinetics and dynamics, favouring the use of short-acting agents and of sedative-opioid combinations. New modes of administration and monitoring intravenous anaesthesia have been developed, with potential application in the intensive care unit. These include the use of target-controlled administration of intravenous drugs, and of electroencephalographic signals to monitor the level of sedation.

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