Anesthesia and analgesia
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Anesthesia and analgesia · May 2022
Association Between Frailty and Clinical Outcomes and Quality of Life in Older Adults Following Hip Fracture Surgery: A Retrospective Cohort Study.
Hip fracture is a serious event in the older population and is associated with morbidity, mortality, and disability among those who survive. Emerging evidence suggests that frailty is pertinent to the clinical outcomes of older patients with hip fracture. ⋯ Frailty status is associated with adverse postoperative outcomes, mortality, and low quality of life 12 months after hip fracture surgery in older patients.
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Although there has been a considerable increase in the representation of women in medicine, a gender gap still exists with regard to leadership positions. This gender discrepancy has been identified in the field of anesthesiology, in terms of first and senior authorship, as well as in general composition of editorial boards in Anesthesiology and Anesthesia & Analgesia. The goal of this study is to examine the current representation of women in editorial boards of anesthesia journals with respect to the hierarchy of different editorial positions and to assess whether there has been improvement toward equity in recent years. ⋯ These findings suggest that in anesthesiology journals, women are underrepresented at all editorial levels, especially at higher levels. As editorial boards have a significant impact on which articles are published by a journal and thereby significant influence on the specialty as a whole, the lack of gender equity in editorial boards should be addressed.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · May 2022
A Decision Tree Approach to Airway Management Pathways in the 2022 Difficult Airway Algorithm of the American Society of Anesthesiologists.
The American Society of Anesthesiologists' (ASA) Task Force on Management of the Difficult Airway has developed a decision tree tool that uses inductive assessments to guide the anesthesiologist's choice of pathway in the ASA's Difficult Airway Algorithm. The tool prompts the anesthesiologist to consider the risk of difficulty with laryngoscopy (direct or indirect) and tracheal intubation, facemask or supraglottic ventilation, gastric contents aspiration, and rapid oxyhemoglobin desaturation. ⋯ Entry into the awake intubation pathway is encouraged when the patient is judged at risk of difficult tracheal intubation and one or more of the following: difficult ventilation, significant aspiration risk, and/or rapid oxyhemoglobin desaturation. The decision tree tool is anticipated to improve communication between anesthesiologists and others by clearly identifying those factors of concern and how decision-making is affected by those concerns.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · May 2022
Future of Perioperative Precision Medicine: Integration of Molecular Science, Dynamic Health Care Informatics, and Implementation of Predictive Pathways in Real Time.
Conceptually, precision medicine is a deep dive to discover disease origin at the molecular or genetic level, thus providing insights that allow clinicians to design corresponding individualized patient therapies. We know that a disease state is created by not only certain molecular derangements but also a biologic milieu promoting the expression of such derangements. These factors together lead to manifested symptoms. ⋯ Precision medicine is gaining ground with the help of personalized health recorders and personal devices that identify disease mechanics, patient-reported outcomes, adverse drug reactions, and drug-drug interaction at the individual level in a closed-loop feedback system. This phenomenon is especially true given increasing surgeries in older adults, many of whom are on multiple medications and varyingly frail. In this era of precision medicine, to provide a comprehensive remedy, the perioperative surgical home must expand, incorporating not only clinicians but also basic science experts and data scientists.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · May 2022
Observational StudyChronic Pain Following Fracture-Related Surgery: Posttraumatic Rather Than Postsurgical Origin Promotes Chronification-A Prospective Observational Study With 1-Year Follow-up.
Chronic posttraumatic/postsurgical pain (CPSP) is common after traumatic or surgical damage. Exposure to both trauma and surgery, with the potential for repeated bone and nerve damage, may increase the risk of CPSP after fracture-related surgery. But the (long-term) incidences of CPSP and neuropathic CPSP and the ensuing burdens are unknown. Therefore, the patients were prospectively assessed within 1 year, and the patient-specific characteristics were explored. ⋯ After early fracture-related surgery, high incidences of CPSP (43%) were prospectively observed 1 year postsurgery, up to approximately 1 in 5 patients who had neuropathic CPSP. At the same time, CPSP was accompanied with an impacted QoL and analgesic dependence, both indicating clinical relevance. Moreover, the high incidence and the early posttraumatic occurrence of more intense pain suggest that the initial fracture-related trauma, rather than the surgical trauma, may predominantly trigger CPSP at Y1 (1 year). Therefore, these exploratory results set the direction of required future research. A future clinical hypothesis might be: treat first what hurts first.