Anesthesiology clinics
-
Anesthesiology clinics · Dec 2012
ReviewPerioperative lung protection strategies in cardiothoracic anesthesia: are they useful?
Patients are at risk for several types of lung injury in the perioperative period. These injuries include atelectasis, pneumonia, pneumothorax, bronchopleural fistula, acute lung injury, and acute respiratory distress syndrome. ⋯ Lung-protective ventilation strategies using more physiologic tidal volumes and appropriate levels of positive end-expiratory pressure can decrease the extent of this injury. This review discusses the effects of mechanical ventilation and its role in ventilator-induced lung injury with specific reference to cardiothoracic anesthesia.
-
Surgical resection remains a standard treatment option for localized esophageal cancer. Surgical approaches to esophagectomy include transhiatal and transthoracic techniques as well as minimally invasive techniques that have been developed to reduce the morbidities associated with laparotomy and thoracotomy incisions. The perioperative mortality for esophagectomy remains high with cardiopulmonary and anastomotic complications as the most frequent and serious morbidities. This article reviews the management of patients presenting for esophagectomy, with a focus on evidence-based anesthetic and perioperative approaches for improving outcomes.
-
Anesthesiology clinics · Dec 2012
ReviewManaging hypoxemia during minimally invasive thoracic surgery.
An ever-increasing number of thoracic procedures are being performed through minimally invasive techniques. Although the incidence of hypoxemia during one-lung ventilation (OLV) has decreased over the years, it remains an issue in roughly 10% of cases. Algorithms for the management of OLV hypoxemia have to be adapted to the thoracoscopic approach, in particular the need for optimal surgical exposure. With appropriate planning and caution, most of the treatment modalities for OLV hypoxemia can be applied to the thoracoscopy setting, with some modifications.
-
Anesthesiology clinics · Dec 2012
ReviewTransesophageal echocardiography in noncardiac thoracic surgery.
In high-risk surgeries with medically complicated patients, transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) adds an additional level of monitoring with which few can disagree. This article presents multiple applications of TEE that can assist both the anesthesiologist and the surgeon through major noncardiac thoracic surgery. It highlights how TEE can be used as an adjuvant to lung resection surgery; TEE as a monitor during lung transplantation; TEE to assess patients for extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; TEE for thoracic aortic surgery; and TEE in the assessment of patients with acute pulmonary hypertension undergoing noncardiac thoracic surgery.
-
Better understanding of the pathophysiology of acute lung injury (ALI) and the hazards inherent to extremes in volume status has led efforts toward goal-directed, individualized therapies designed to achieve optimal hemodynamic status. The role for colloids both as a volume expander and potential protective agent against ALI is receiving revived interest. The evidence for the impact of fluid therapy is encouraging and supports the undertaking of properly designed perioperative fluid trials in thoracic surgeries. Such work offers hope that optimal fluid strategies can be defined and reduce the adverse events that have affected patients having lung resection.