Anesthesiology clinics of North America
-
The anesthesiologist caring for infants and children undergoing thoracic surgery faces many challenges. An understanding of the primary underlying lesion as well as associated anomalies that may impact perioperative management is paramount. ⋯ Familiarity with a variety of techniques for SLV suited to the patient's size will allow maximal surgical exposure while minimizing trauma to the lungs and airways. Finally, use of regional anesthetic techniques, including epidural anesthesia and analgesia, facilitates optimal postoperative pain control and pulmonary function.
-
Anesthesiol Clin North America · Mar 2002
ReviewNew concepts in acute and extended postoperative pain management in children.
Increased knowledge of the pathophysiology of pain in children and an improved understanding of the pharmacology and pharmacodynamics of multiple agents have provided the clinician with a wide variety of tools to treat postoperative pain in children. The interest in a multimodal approach is kindled by the realization that the combination of a number of therapies can enhance analgesia with fewer untoward side effects. ⋯ Many therapies still require critical evidence-based evaluations to assess how well they work in larger patient populations. Dedication to research, compassionate patient care, and a willingness to teach the next generation of clinicians will bring us closer to the goal of safe and pain-free surgery.
-
Fetal surgery is the antenatal treatment of fetal malformations that cannot be adequately corrected after birth. Anesthesia for fetal surgery involves two patients, and issues of maternal safety, avoidance of fetal asphyxia, adequate fetal anesthesia and monitoring, and uterine relaxation are important. Communication with the surgeon to determine the surgical approach and need for uterine relaxation allows the anesthesiologist the ability to vary the anesthetic technique. Lessons learned from fetal surgery may help other neonates with life-threatening anomalies and may help understand the complex issues related to preterm labor.
-
The Bispectral Index (BIS) is a newly processed electroencephalogram parameter that was specifically developed to measure the hypnotic effects of anesthesia. Results from volunteer studies demonstrate that BIS correlates well with clinical assessments of sedation induced by sedative-hypnotic drugs. ⋯ The data suggest that improved anesthetic titration with BIS provides sufficient clinical and economic benefits to justify its routine use. This article summarizes the clinical development and validation of BIS and describes how BIS monitoring can be used to improve anesthetic outcomes.
-
Initial assessment to determine pulselessness, monitoring the status of the patient, and the effectiveness of resuscitation efforts are integral parts of cardiopulmonary resuscitation. This article focuses on aspects of monitoring during cardiopulmonary resuscitation: electrocardiography and assessment of the adequacy of chest compressions.