Progress in cardiovascular diseases
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Prog Cardiovasc Dis · Mar 1998
ReviewSurgery-specific considerations in the cardiac patient undergoing noncardiac surgery.
Myocardial infarction after noncardiac surgery in patients with coronary artery disease results from the interplay of patient-specific, anesthetic-specific, and surgery-specific factors. Surgery-specific factors include the stress response to injury, both neurohormonal and hemostatic alterations, and clinically-significant operative parameters such as urgency, duration, blood loss, body core temperature, fluid shifts, and location of surgery. ⋯ Overall, the morbidity and mortality of surgery is minimal even in high-risk patients, and the contribution of surgery-specific factors to operative risk is subtle compared with that of patient specific-factors such as severity of coronary disease and other comorbid conditions. Nonetheless, the optimal surgical management of patients with coronary disease requires the collaborative effort of the anesthesiologist, cardiologist, and surgeon.
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Perioperative cardiac events are the largest cause of morbidity and mortality for patients undergoing elective surgery. As a result, numerous recent studies have focused on attempts to identify patients at increased risk for perioperative events. These have delineated testing modalities capable of identifying high-risk patients, and clinical markers which further stratify patients facing elective surgery into high-, medium-, and low-risk subgroups. ⋯ Assessment and intervention for risk factors of long-term cardiac disease is also stressed, as the preoperative evaluation represents an opportunity for improvement in the short- and long-term cardiac risk profile. Finally, the algorithm for preoperative cardiovascular evaluation published jointly by the ACC/AHA joint taskforce on practice guidelines is reviewed. This algorithm is a synthesis of the current literature, into a cost effective and efficient approach to patient evaluation.
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Prog Cardiovasc Dis · Mar 1998
ReviewPerioperative cardiac evaluation for noncardiac surgery noninvasive cardiac testing.
Prognostic risk stratification to identify perioperative and long-term cardiac risk in selected patients undergoing noncardiac surgery is part of good clinical practice. Exercise variables associated with significant increased risk include poor functional capacity (eg, <4 metabolic equivalents), marked exercise-induced ST segment shift or angina at low workloads, and inability to increase or actually decrease systolic blood pressure with progressive exercise. Approximately 40% of patients tested before peripheral vascular surgery will have an abnormal exercise electrocardiogram (ECG). ⋯ Myocardial perfusion variables predictive of increased cardiac events include severity of the perfusion defect, number of reversible defects, extent of fixed and reversible defects, increased lung uptake of thallium-201, and marked ST segment changes associated with angina during the test. The reported sensitivity and specificity of dobutamine-induced echocardiographic wall motion abnormalities in patients with peripheral vascular disease is similar to myocardial perfusion scintigraphy, but the confidence limits are wider due to the smaller sample size in these more recent studies. In conclusion, noninvasive cardiac testing should be used selectively in patients undergoing noncardiac surgery; the results provide useful estimates of short- and long-term risk of cardiac events, and the magnitude of abnormal response on noninvasive testing should be used to formulate decisions regarding the need for coronary angiography and subsequent revascularization.
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The intraoperative management of the high-risk patient has received a great deal of attention and research during the past decade. Based on the available evidence, there appears to be no one best anesthetic technique or agent. ⋯ Perioperative pharmacological treatment with alpha-2 agonists and beta-adrenergic blocking agents are associated with a reduced incidence of perioperative myocardial ischemia and improved long-term survival, respectively. Future research will be required to determine whether prophylactic therapy or early treatment of perioperative myocardial ischemia will lead to improved outcome.