Best practice & research. Clinical anaesthesiology
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Best Pract Res Clin Anaesthesiol · Jun 2006
ReviewPostoperative cognitive dysfunction: incidence and prevention.
Postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) is a decline in cognitive function for weeks or months after surgery. Due to its subtle nature, neuropsychological testing is necessary for its detection. ⋯ The risk of POCD increases with age, and the type of surgery is also important because there is a very low incidence associated with minor surgery. Regional anaesthesia does not seem to reduce the incidence of POCD, and cognitive function does not seem to improve after carotid surgery as has previously been suggested.
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Acupuncture and related techniques are increasingly practised in anaesthesia. This paper reviews the current evidence and applicability of acupuncture and related techniques for anaesthetic procedures and postoperative nausea and vomiting. Recent evidence suggests that manual acupuncture is effective for reducing preoperative anxiety and for postoperative pain relief. ⋯ The use of acupuncture for labour pain management appears promising but requires further research. Patient selection, acupoint selection, needling techniques, and mode of acupuncture need to be considered when applying acupuncture and related techniques in the perioperative setting. There are guidelines for the conduct and reporting of acupuncture research, and these should be followed to improve the quality of studies.
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Closed-loop systems are able to make their own decisions and to try to reach and maintain a preset target. As a result, they might help the anaesthetist to optimise the titration of drug administration without any overshoot, controlling physiological functions and guiding monitoring variables. Thanks to the development of fast computer technology and more reliable pharmacological effect measures, the study of automation in anaesthesia has regained popularity. ⋯ Until now, most of these systems have had to be under development. The challenge is now fully to establish the safety, efficacy, reliability and utility of closed-loop anaesthesia so that it can be adopted in the clinical setting. Besides, their role in optimising the controlled variables and control models, these systems have to be tested in extreme circumstances in order to test their robustness.
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Analgesia (pain relief) amnesia (loss of memory) and immobilisation are the three major components of anaesthesia. The perception of pain, and therefore, the need for analgesia, is individual, and the monitoring of analgesia is indirect and, in essence, of the moment. Under general anaesthesia, analgesia is continually influenced by external stimuli and the administration of analgesic drugs, and cannot be really separated from anaesthesia: the interaction between analgesia and anaesthesia is inescapable. ⋯ For the past few years, automated electroencephalographic analysis has been of great interest in monitoring anaesthesia and could be useful in adapting the peroperative administration of opioids. A range of information collected from the electroencephalogram, haemodynamic readings and pulse plethysmography might be necessary for monitoring the level of nociception during anaesthesia. Information theory, multimodal monitoring, and signal processing and integration are the basis of future monitoring.
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This chapter will focus on the two auditory evoked potentials (AEP) most commonly used to assess the effects of general anesthetics on the brain, the auditory middle latency response (AMLR) and the 40 Hz auditory steady-state response (40 Hz-ASSR). We will review their physiological basis, the recording methodology, the effects of general anesthetics, their ability to track changes in level of consciousness and their clinical applications. Because of space constraints, this review will be limited to human studies.