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Anesthesia and analgesia · Jul 2019
ReviewSafety of Beach Chair Position Shoulder Surgery: A Review of the Current Literature.
- Glenn S Murphy, Steven B Greenberg, and Joseph W Szokol.
- From the Department of Anesthesiology, NorthShore University HealthSystem, University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine, Evanston, Illinois.
- Anesth. Analg. 2019 Jul 1; 129 (1): 101-118.
AbstractAlthough uncommon, severe neurological events have been reported in patients undergoing shoulder surgery in the beach chair position. The presumed etiology of central nervous system injury is hypotension and subsequent cerebral hypoperfusion that occurs after alterations in positioning under general anesthesia. Most clinical trials have demonstrated that beach chair positioning results in reductions in regional brain oxygenation, cerebral blood flow, and jugular bulb oxygenation, as well as impairment in cerebral autoregulation and electroencephalographic/processed electroencephalographic variables. Further studies are needed to define the incidence of adverse neurological adverse events in the beach chair position, identify the best intraoperative neurological monitors that are predictive of neurocognitive outcomes, the lowest "safe" acceptable blood pressure during surgery for individual patients, and the optimal interventions to treat intraoperative hypotension.
This article appears in the collection: Does beach-chair positioning increase the risk of stroke?.
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