British journal of anaesthesia
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A great deal of concern has recently arisen regarding the safety of anaesthesia in infants and children. There is mounting and convincing preclinical evidence in rodents and non-human primates that anaesthetics in common clinical use are neurotoxic to the developing brain in vitro and cause long-term neurobehavioural abnormalities in vivo. An estimated 6 million children (including 1.5 million infants) undergo surgery and anaesthesia each year in the USA alone, so the clinical relevance of anaesthetic neurotoxicity is an urgent matter of public health. ⋯ The aim of this study is to examine the neurodevelopmental effects of exposure to general anaesthesia during inguinal hernia surgery before 36 months of age. Another large-scale study is the GAS study, which will compare the neurodevelopmental outcome between two anaesthetic techniques, general sevoflurane anaesthesia and regional anaesthesia, in infants undergoing inguinal hernia repair. These study results should contribute significant information related to anaesthetic neurotoxicity in children.
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Patients with coronary stents undergoing non-cardiac surgery are at increased risk of major adverse cardiovascular events perioperatively. Impeccable patient care and communication between all members of the healthcare team will minimize this risk. The dominant risk factor for stent thrombosis and major adverse cardiovascular events is the interruption of dual antiplatelet therapy (e.g. aspirin and clopidogrel). ⋯ The use of a neuraxial anaesthetic technique must be carefully considered due to the risk of an epidural haematoma. Perioperative monitoring should focus on early recognition of myocardial ischaemia, infarction, or both. If stent thrombosis is present, rapid triage to an interventional catheterization laboratory is essential for restoration of coronary blood flow.
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Multicenter Study
Thromboelastometry (ROTEM) in children: age-related reference ranges and correlations with standard coagulation tests.
The small sample volume needed and the prompt availability of results make viscoelastic methods like rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM) attractive for monitoring coagulation in small children. However, data on reference ranges for ROTEM parameters in children are scarce. ⋯ Reference ranges for ROTEM assays were determined for all paediatric age groups. These values will be helpful when monitoring paediatric patients and in studies of perioperative coagulation in children.
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Multicenter Study
Revised cardiac risk index and postoperative morbidity after elective orthopaedic surgery: a prospective cohort study.
The revised cardiac risk index (RCRI) is associated strongly with increased cardiac ischaemic risk and perioperative death. Associations with non-cardiac morbidity in non-cardiac surgery have not been explored. In the elective orthopaedic surgical population, morbidity is common but preoperative predictors are unclear. We hypothesized that RCRI would identify individuals at increased risk of non-cardiac morbidity in this surgically homogenous population. ⋯ mRCRI score ≥ 3 is associated with increased postoperative non-cardiac morbidity and prolonged hospital stay after elective orthopaedic procedures. mRCRI can contribute to objective risk stratification of postoperative morbidity.
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Patients are at risk for several types of lung injury in the perioperative period including atelectasis, pneumonia, pneumothorax, acute lung injury, and acute respiratory distress syndrome. Anaesthetic management can cause, exacerbate, or ameliorate these injuries. This review examines the effects of perioperative mechanical ventilation and its role in ventilator-induced lung injury. Lung protective ventilatory strategies to specific clinical situations such as cardiopulmonary bypass and one-lung ventilation along with newer novel lung protective strategies are discussed.