• Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Jun 2012

    Review

    The anesthesiologist and end-of-life care.

    • Sebastiano Mercadante and Antonello Giarratano.
    • Anesthesia & Intensive Care and Pain Relief & Supportive Care Unit, La Maddalena Cancer Center, University of Palermo, Italy. terapiadeldlore@lamaddalenanet.it
    • Curr Opin Anaesthesiol. 2012 Jun 1;25(3):371-5.

    Purpose Of ReviewAnesthesiologists may face problematic situations when patients are close to death, in which clinical problems, decision-making processes, and ethical issues are often interconnected and dependent on each of them. The aim of this review is to assess the recent literature regarding the anesthesiological role for advanced cancer patients.Recent FindingsPalliative sedation in the dying patients, end-of-life problems in the ICU, and pain control in advanced cancer patients have been the subject of recent research. All these issues have shown that anesthesiologist would be expert in the field of pain and symptom control at the end of life. End-of-life care problems are common in ICU, and a decision-making process requires knowledge and management of patients' wishes, past and projected future quality of life, severity and prognosis of illness, patients' age, regarding withholding and withdrawing of futile treatments in anticipation of death, or relieving symptoms close to death.SummaryAnesthesiologists should be competent in all aspects of terminal care, including the practical and ethical aspects of withdrawing different modalities of life-sustaining treatment and the use of sedatives, analgesics, and nonpharmacologic approaches to easing the suffering of the dying process. More research is needed to provide models which should be spread in the scientific community to afford this difficult task.

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