Current opinion in anaesthesiology
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Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Jun 2014
ReviewAnesthesia and ventilation strategies in children with asthma: part II - intraoperative management.
As asthma is a frequent disease especially in children, anesthetists are increasingly providing anesthesia for children requiring elective surgery with well controlled asthma but also for those requiring urgent surgery with poorly controlled or undiagnosed asthma. This second part of this two-part review details the medical and ventilatory management throughout the perioperative period in general but also includes the perioperative management of acute bronchospasm and asthma exacerbations in children with asthma. ⋯ To minimize the considerable risk of perioperative respiratory adverse events in asthmatic children, perioperative management should be based on two main pillars: the preoperative optimization of asthma treatment (please refer to the first part of this two-part review) and - the focus of this second part of this review - the optimization of anesthesia management in order to optimize lung function and minimize bronchial hyperreactivity in the perioperative period.
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Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Jun 2014
ReviewNew approaches to obstetric hemorrhage: the postpartum hemorrhage consensus algorithm.
Postpartum hemorrhage is increasingly frequent and a major contributor to maternal morbidity and mortality. Although individual steps, such as coagulation or surgical management, have been reviewed, there is little information on treatment algorithms. ⋯ The algorithm is thought to serve as a template for local adaptation. It will hopefully improve the management of postpartum hemorrhage.
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Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Jun 2014
ReviewPerioperative implications of the patient with autonomic dysfunction.
The autonomic nervous system functions to control heart rate, blood pressure, respiratory rate, gastrointestinal motility, hormone release, and body temperature on a second-to-second basis. Here we summarize some of the latest literature on autonomic dysfunction, focusing primarily on the perioperative implications. ⋯ Patients with dysautonomia often have unpredictable and paradoxical physiological responses to various perioperative stimuli. Knowledge of the underlying pathophysiology of their condition is required in order to reduce symptom exacerbation and limit morbidity and mortality during the perioperative period.