British journal of anaesthesia
-
When sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 (SGLT2) inhibitors were primarily prescribed for treatment of diabetes mellitus, guidelines recommended withholding SGLT2 inhibitors before surgery to mitigate the associated risk of ketoacidosis. However, currently, SGLT2 inhibitors are an established therapy for patients with heart failure, and there is evidence that withholding SGLT2 inhibitors can worsen these patients' cardiovascular risk profile. We present an updated risk-benefit analysis of withholding SGLT2 inhibitors before surgery, focusing on patients with heart failure and addressing the risk of ketoacidosis and its treatment in these patients. Clinicians should consider perioperative continuation of SGLT2 inhibitors when prescribed for treatment of heart failure.
-
Enhanced critical care delivery has led to improved survival rates in critically ill patients, yet sepsis remains a leading cause of multiorgan failure with variable recovery outcomes. Chronic critical illness, characterised by prolonged ICU stays and persistent end-organ dysfunction, presents a significant challenge in patient management, often requiring multifaceted interventions. Recent research, highlighted in a comprehensive review in the British Journal of Anaesthesia, focuses on addressing the pathophysiological drivers of chronic critical illness, such as persistent inflammation, immunosuppression, and catabolism, through targeted therapeutic strategies including immunomodulation, muscle wasting prevention, nutritional support, and microbiome modulation. Although promising avenues exist, challenges remain in patient heterogeneity, treatment timing, and the need for multimodal approaches.
-
Variants of perioperative cardiac output-guided haemodynamic therapy algorithms have been tested over the last few decades, without clear evidence of effectiveness. Newer approaches have focussed on individualisation of physiological targets and have been tested in early efficacy trials. Uncertainty about the benefits remains. Adoption of novel trial designs could overcome the limitations of smaller trials of this complex intervention and accelerate the exploration of future developments.
-
The year 2024 marks 70 years since graduation of the first candidates in revised examinations for Fellowship of the Faculty of Anaesthetists of the Royal College of Surgeons (FFARCS). Here we review the progress of specialisation and professionalisation of anaesthesia in the UK.