Der Anaesthesist
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The demographic change is associated with an increasing number of elderly patients with serious comorbidities. The prevalence of coronary heart disease in particular increases with age and raises the risk of perioperative myocardial ischemia. In the last few years various interventions have been evaluated to lower the perioperative risk for serious cardiovascular events. ⋯ Besides ischemic and anesthetic-induced preconditioning the noninvasive technique of remote preconditioning offers interesting possibilities, especially for patients with serious comorbidities; however, large scale randomized clinical multicentre trials are still needed. Regarding cardioprotective effectiveness, the clinical data for regional anesthesia are very heterogeneous; nevertheless regional anesthesia is very effective in postoperative pain therapy. Therefore regional anesthesia should be used as a part of multimodal therapy concepts to lower the risk of perioperative cardiovascular events.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
[Removal of the laryngeal mask airway in the post-anesthesia care unit. A means of process optimization?].
Removal of the laryngeal mask airway in the post-anesthesia care unit could potentially contribute to a faster turnover from one operation to the next. The aim of this study was, therefore, to obtain an insight into the potential time saving and the safety of planned removal of the ProSeal™-LMA (PLMA) in the post-anesthesia care unit. ⋯ Planned PLMA removal in the recovery room after BIS-guided balanced anesthesia did not enable the anesthetist to be available earlier for induction of anesthesia in the following patient. Hence the anesthetist could not contribute to a faster turnover of cases. Obviously, with the type of close communication between surgeon and anesthetist dictated by the study protocol (announcement of expected end of surgery by the surgeon 20 min before end of surgery) it is possible for the patient to regain consciousness within a very small time window following the end of surgery. Following this kind of protocol, postponement of removal of the LMA in the recovery room does not seem to be attractive neither from a clinical nor an economic point of view. In contrast, removal of LMA in the recovery room should be restricted to occasional cases with an abrupt end of the operation or prolonged emergence from anesthesia. The obvious risk of hypoxemia necessitates continuous O(2) application and S(p)O(2) monitoring during transport to the recovery room.
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Peripheral regional anesthesia is a commonly used and safe procedure and eneral complications or side effects are generally rare. Nerve damage has an incidence <0.1% depending on the definition and the prognosis is good. To avoid bleeding complications the national standards of block performance under antithrombotic therapy should be respected. ⋯ Potential infectious complications can occur mainly as a result of catheter techniques and require a strict aseptic approach. Further rare complications are allergies, dislocation of catheters and knotting or loops in catheters. Besides the general complications, there are some specific complications depending on the puncture site, such as pneumothorax or renal puncture.
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Ambulatory surgery continues to grow and is slowly becoming routine in the majority of cases. Although the development of ambulatory surgery in Germany appears to be somewhat delayed, this is actually a chance to learn from worldwide experiences and avoid the mistakes others made earlier. This article investigates current trends and developments in day case surgery and discusses the extended role and influence of the anesthetist in the perioperative setting.
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High risk pulmonary embolism commonly presents with a variety of symptoms and is an acute life-threatening event. In patients showing unclear acute circulatory distress, pulmonary embolism should be quickly ruled out by computed tomography or echocardiography. The diagnostic steps and surgical treatment of pulmonary embolism in a 25-year-old female patient suffering from acute circulatory insufficiency resulting in cardiac arrest within 11 min after emergency hospital admission are reported. ⋯ The patient was successfully extubated the following day and despite the long resuscitation time the outcome was excellent without any neurological deficit. Recent publications addressing the advantages of primary embolectomy versus intravenous thrombolysis in acute circulatory distress caused by pulmonary embolism are discussed. Primary surgical treatment including cardiopulmonary bypass for right ventricular relief and re-establishing of systemic perfusion is recommended for patients with pulmonary embolism undergoing cardiopulmonary resuscitation.