Current opinion in anaesthesiology
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Despite marked improvements in perioperative outcomes, esophagectomy continues to be a high-risk operation associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Progress has been achieved through evidence-based changes in preoperative optimization, intraoperative ventilation strategies, fluid therapy, and analgesia, as well as expedited postoperative recovery pathways. This review will summarize the recent literature on the anesthetic management of patients undergoing esophageal resection. ⋯ The morbidity and mortality after esophagectomy remains high despite significant improvements over the last decades. Enhanced recovery pathways appear promising in achieving further marginal gains but at present are lacking large scale, prospective, multicenter evidence.
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Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Feb 2017
ReviewObesity hypoventilation syndrome, sleep apnea, overlap syndrome: perioperative management to prevent complications.
The prevalence of sleep disordered breathing (SDB) is increasing proportional to the prevalence of obesity. Although anesthesiologists are familiar with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) - the most common SDB, anesthesiologists may not be aware of other SDB such as obesity hypoventilation syndrome (OHS) and overlap syndrome (combination of OSA and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease). The present review provides an update of information regarding the perioperative management of OHS and overlap syndrome. ⋯ Identification and preoperative optimization of these high-risk patients are most important. A protocol-based risk mitigation is necessary for improving the intraoperative and postoperative outcome of these patients. As a perioperative physician, anesthesiologists have a key role in the management of patients with SDB.
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Ventilator-induced lung injury is a major contributor to perioperative lung injury. The end-expiratory lung volume, regional lung overdistension, and tidal recruitment are known to be the main factors causing subsequent alveolar damage and inflammation. The alveolar-capillary membrane including the endothelial glycocalyx as an integral part of the vascular endothelium seems to play a major role in different kinds of lung injury. ⋯ This review focuses on the involvement of the pulmonary endothelial glycocalyx in the context of perioperative lung injury. The pathophysiological mechanisms and trigger factors of glycocalyx deterioration are discussed, and prevention strategies are taken into consideration.
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Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Feb 2017
ReviewTherapy of acute kidney injury in the perioperative setting.
The current review analyzes the current pharmacologic approaches in cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury and renal replacement/support therapies. ⋯ Cardiac surgery is responsible for the highest risk of renal dysfunction with respect to other surgical settings. A number of different and coacting insults, including toxins, renal hypoperfusion, ischemia-reperfusion injury, and systemic inflammation, are leading causes of this frequent complication. Intense research is ongoing on the treatment of established cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury and, in this view, a holistic approach including preoperative data, risk stratification, prevention, timely diagnosis, and aggressive intervention can limit the burdening consequences of renal dysfunction in these patients. Although no specific pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic strategy can be currently recommended outside clinical research, the prompt identification of renal dysfunction and the application of multimodal treatments are fundamental aspects. Right ventricular dysfunction and increased central venous pressure, frequently affecting cardiac surgery patients, potentially lead to congestive renal dysfunction. Hemodynamic management covers a central role in these cases.
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Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Feb 2017
ReviewDiagnosis of cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury from functional to damage biomarkers.
Acute kidney injury (AKI) occurs in up to 30% after cardiac surgery and is associated with adverse outcome. Currently, cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury (CSA-AKI) is diagnosed by Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes criteria based on creatinine and urine output. To detect and treat AKI earlier, various biomarkers have been evaluated. This review addresses the current position of the two damage biomarkers neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL) and [TIMP-2] [IGFBP7] in clinical practice. ⋯ NGAL and urinary [TIMP-2] [IGFBP7], in combination with pretest assessment, are promising tools for early detection and treatment in CSA-AKI.