Best practice & research. Clinical anaesthesiology
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Best Pract Res Clin Anaesthesiol · Mar 2002
ReviewAnaesthesia for minimally invasive gastric and bowel surgery.
It is of great importance that anaesthetic regimens match surgical procedures in regard to surgical time, in reducing organ dysfunction elicited by the anaesthesia and surgical trauma and by providing optimal post-operative pain treatment, leaving the possibility of early mobilization. New, rapidly eliminated anaesthetic drugs are, by virtue of their pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic profiles, optimal for use; combined with continuous thoracic epidurals with local anaesthetics and low-dose opioids, these drugs may permit reduction of various post-operative complications. ⋯ Few studies have evaluated whether these changes affect surgical outcome and whether or not different anaesthetic regimens influence relevant morbidity parameters. In future documentation it is important that controlled, well-designed clinical studies evaluate how the advantages from multimodal anaesthetic techniques improve relevant surgical outcome.
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Best Pract Res Clin Anaesthesiol · Mar 2002
ReviewAnaesthetic considerations for hysteroscopic surgery.
Use of the hysteroscope in modern gynaecological practice continues to develop as a diagnostic and management tool for intrauterine disease. Operative hysteroscopy (OH) is now an accepted alternative to hysterectomy for women with menorrhagia. The advantages of OH are associated with its short operating time, rapid post-operative recovery and low morbidity. ⋯ There are no controlled studies comparing different anaesthetic techniques for OH. Regional anaesthesia may offer an advantage over general anaesthesia because it enables early detection of fluid overload. Great care should be taken when positioning the patient to prevent peripheral neuropathy.
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Best Pract Res Clin Anaesthesiol · Mar 2002
ReviewAnaesthesia for minimally invasive cardiac surgery.
Minimally invasive cardiac surgery is used for both extracardiac and intracardiac procedures. Extracardiac procedures, such as coronary artery bypass grafting, are often performed on a beating heart. Intracardiac procedures are done with the aid of cardiopulmonary bypass. ⋯ Patient selection is important to avoid intra-operative and post-operative complications. Prolonged single-lung ventilation, incomplete revascularization in hybrid procedures, and limited access for rapid intervention pose challenges with patient management. Conversion to sternotomy that may be required occasionally and extension of portals over several dermatomal segments mandate a versatile analgesic technique.
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The surgical requirement for thoracoscopy is a good view of the contents of the thorax. This is achieved by capitalizing on natural consequences and the skills of anaesthesiologists to produce a pneumothorax and collapse the ipsilateral lung--a process that is commonly enhanced by insufflating carbon dioxide. Insufflating CO2 to actively promote lung collapse creates the dynamics of a tension pneumothorax. ⋯ The mechanism is not defined but it differs from that associated with thoracotomy. Epidural analgesia and opioids may be required. Chronic pain syndromes have been described as complications.
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Technological advances in imaging, computing and surgical instrumentation have encouraged the application of minimally invasive surgical techniques to various neurosurgical disorders. This chapter discusses the wide application of neurosurgery and the implications for anaesthesia, focusing on the specific anaesthetic considerations for neuroendoscopy, stereotactic procedures and radiosurgery.