Best practice & research. Clinical anaesthesiology
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General anaesthesia accompanied by surgical stress may influence the inflammatory responses that are essential for maintaining the homeostatic state during the postoperative course. Severe dysregulation of the inflammatory process may provoke or aggravate postoperative complications, e.g. increased susceptibility to infections, inadequate stress reactions and hypercatabolism. ⋯ Potential reasons for these controversial findings include heterogeneous patient study groups with diverse pre-existing diseases, lack of standardisation of surgical procedures, major differences in the length and severity of surgical tissue injury and a small number of randomised studies. Although the immunological effects are of minor consequence in subjects with normal immune functions, the suppression of cellular and humoral immunity following surgery and general anaesthesia may be relevant in patients with pre-existing immune disorders.
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Surgical manipulation of the gut elicits an inflammatory cascade within the intestinal muscularis that contributes to postoperative bowel dysmotility. A range of cytokines is sequentially released into the peritoneal fluid following abdominal surgery, their concentrations reflecting the magnitude of surgical trauma. ⋯ Laparoscopic surgery decreases the local and systemic production of cytokines and acute-phase reactants, and better preserves peritoneal immunity compared with open surgery. As concluded from animal studies, the gas used for the pneumoperitoneum may possess substantial immunomodulatory activity.
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Best Pract Res Clin Anaesthesiol · Sep 2004
ReviewInflammation and the acute respiratory distress syndrome.
Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is a clinical syndrome of non-cardiogenic pulmonary oedema associated with bilateral pulmonary infiltrates, stiff lungs and refractory hypoxaemia. ARDS is characterized by an explosive acute inflammatory response in the lung parenchyma, leading to alveolar oedema, decreased lung compliance and, ultimately, hypoxaemia. Although our understanding of the causes and pathophysiology of ARDS has increased, the mortality rate remains in the range of 30-50%. ⋯ Mechanical ventilation is the main therapeutic intervention in the management of ARDS. The only approach that has been shown to reduce the inflammatory response and mortality is the use of lung-protective ventilatory strategy with a low tidal volume and high positive-end expiratory pressure. This chapter will review the current state of the literature on the pathogenesis of ARDS and ventilatory and pharmacotherapy approaches to its management.
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Best Pract Res Clin Anaesthesiol · Sep 2004
ReviewRegional anaesthesia, local anaesthetics and the surgical stress response.
Epidural anaesthesia has the potential to improve patients' outcome after major surgical procedures by reducing postoperative morbidity and duration of recovery. Possible benefits include the attenuation of cardiac complications, an earlier return of gastrointestinal function associated with an increase in patients' comfort overall, decreased incidence of pulmonary dysfunction, beneficial effects on the coagulation system and a reduction in the inflammatory response. ⋯ Since local anaesthetics (LAs), reabsorbed from the epidural space, seem to contribute to these effects, it is not easy to differentiate between the systemic effects of LAs and the effects of neuraxial blockade by epidural anaesthesia. Thus, in patients not able or willing to receive intra- and/or postoperative epidural analgesia, systemic administration of LAs may be considered to be a new therapeutic approach for the prevention of postoperative disorders by modulation of the peri- and postoperative inflammatory.
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The physiological alterations induced by acute inflammation present significant management challenges for anaesthesiologists. Major surgery, trauma, burns and sepsis all have large inflammatory components. Acute inflammation is characterized by vasodilatation, fluid exudation and neutrophil infiltration. ⋯ This syndrome is characterized by hyperinflammation and can cause organ injury, shock and death in its most severe forms. Overall, our understanding of inflammation has increased tremendously during the past 20 years. However, these basic science advances have not yet translated into widespread benefit for patients suffering from trauma, sepsis and systemic inflammation.