Canadian journal of anaesthesia = Journal canadien d'anesthésie
-
To review the literature on tracheal and carinal resection and reconstruction, and to report the general approach to these patients, as well as the general guidelines for the safe administration of anesthesia. The airway management is extensively reviewed. ⋯ The management of anesthesia for tracheal surgery presents many challenges to the anesthesiologist. Knowledge of the various techniques for airway management is crucial. Meticulous planning and communication between the anesthesia and surgical teams are mandatory for the safe and successful outcome of surgery for patients undergoing this procedure.
-
To review the current status and possible future of neuroleptanalgesia/anesthesia, techniques that may be nearly extinct. ⋯ The advantages of newer anesthetic agents have redefined the clinical indications for neuroleptanesthesia. In routine modern anesthesia, anxiolysis, sedation, and/or analgesia is better provided, with quicker recovery, by the new pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic characteristics of recent medications than by the neuroleptic component of neuroleptanesthesia.
-
To analyze studies of neurological injury after open-heart surgery in infants and children and to discuss the effects of cardiopulmonary bypass, hypothermia and deep hypothermic circulatory arrest on cerebral blood flow, cerebral metabolism and brain temperature. ⋯ Newer strategies, including the use of low-flow CPB, pulsatile CPB, pH-stat acid-base management and a cold reperfusion, are being explored to ensure better cerebral protection. Advances in monitoring technology and better understanding of the relationship of cerebral blood flow and metabolism during the different modalities of cardiopulmonary bypass management will help in the medical and anaesthetic development of strategies to improve neurological and developmental outcomes.