Minerva anestesiologica
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Minerva anestesiologica · Dec 2016
ReviewPerioperative and periprocedural airway management and respiratory safety for the obese patient: 2016 SIAARTI consensus.
Proper management of obese patients requires a team vision and appropriate behaviors by all health care providers in hospital. Specialist competencies are fundamental, as are specific clinical pathways and good clinical practices designed to deal with patients whose Body Mass Index (BMI) is ≥30 kg/m2. Standards of care for bariatric and non-bariatric surgery and for the critical care management of this population exist but are not well defined nor clearly followed in every hospital. ⋯ The Italian Society of Anesthesia, Analgesia, Resuscitation and Intensive Care (SIAARTI) organized a consensus project involving other national scientific societies to increase risk awareness, define the best multidisciplinary approach for treating obese patients in election and emergency, and enable every hospital to provide appropriate levels of care and good clinical practices. The Obesity Project Task Force, a section of the SIAARTI Airway Management Study Group, used a formal consensus process to identify a series of notes, alerts and statements, to be adopted as bundles, to define appropriate clinical pathways for hospitalized obese patients. The consensus, approved by the Task Force and endorsed by several European scientific societies actively operating in this field, is presented herein.
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Minerva anestesiologica · Dec 2016
ReviewThe aging digestive tract. What should we anesthesiologists know about it?
At present, elderly individuals represent approximately 18.5% of the European population and account for about 23% of surgical procedures performed. This patient population is at a higher risk for perioperative complications and adverse postoperative outcome. This narrative review highlights our current knowledge about physiological changes in the aging gut and the implications for anesthesiologists. ⋯ Healthy aging appears to be associated with modest slowing of gastric emptying, but this does not demand prolonged preoperative fasting. The physiological changes associated with polypharmacy also make elderly patients a risk group for pulmonary aspiration during anesthesia. Further research is needed to determine the effects of commonly used anesthetic agents on the pharyngo-gastrointestinal tract in elderly patients.