Articles: operative.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Jun 2018
Achieving Milestones as a Prerequisite for Proceeding With a Clinical Trial.
Although the National Institutes of Health (NIH) invests $30 billion in research annually, many funded studies fail to generate results that can inform practice. The National Institutes of Health introduced a phased funding mechanism as one potential solution. Study-specific milestones are established for an initial pilot phase. We assess the utility of this phased approach through the ongoing Electroencephalography (EEG) Guidance of Anesthesia to Alleviate Geriatric Syndromes (ENGAGES) pragmatic clinical trial. The hypothesis of the trial is that EEG guidance of general anesthesia, through prevention of EEG suppression, can decrease postoperative delirium and its downstream negative sequelae. ⋯ With the ENGAGES trial, we demonstrated that key milestones can be identified and progressively assessed during a pilot phase. Success in attaining appropriate milestones hypothetically predicts meaningful completion of a study, and can provide justification for proceeding beyond a pilot phase. The impact of this phased approach on return on investment and scientific yield requires additional study.
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Sudden postoperative hearing loss is rare, and thought to be caused by a variety of mechanisms. Here we report on a patient with Crouzon syndrome who experienced multiple episodes of postoperative hearing loss, with persistent hearing loss occurring after she received nitrous oxide as part of a general anesthetic. ⋯ Patients with craniofacial syndromes may have acoustic nerve compression from skull base and cartilage anomalies that cause narrowing of the internal acoustic meatus. These anatomic variations may make patients more susceptible to increased middle ear pressure secondary to nitrous oxide, increasing their risk for hearing loss.
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We present the perioperative details of a 2-year-old child scheduled for cleft palate repair. Low pulse oximetry readings after induction of anesthesia and before surgery led to the diagnosis of HbMIwate, a rare congenital methemoglobinemia due to mutation in the α-globin gene. We explored the utility of noninvasive cooximetry to monitor methemoglobin and oxygenation during anesthesia and found that noninvasive cooximetry is not useful to monitor oxygenation or to detect the percentage of methemoglobin arising from congenital variants like HbMIwate.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Jun 2018
Is Compliance With Surgical Care Improvement Project Cardiac (SCIP-Card-2) Measures for Perioperative β-Blockers Associated With Reduced Incidence of Mortality and Cardiovascular-Related Critical Quality Indicators After Noncardiac Surgery?
While continuation of β-blockers (BBs) perioperatively has become a national quality improvement measure, the relationship between BB withdrawal and mortality and cardiovascular-related critical quality indicators has not been studied in a contemporary cohort of patients undergoing noncardiac surgery. ⋯ Perioperative withdrawal of BBs was associated with increased risk for mortality within 48 hours after noncardiac surgery and with decreased risk for need of vasopressor during the early postoperative period and a shorter stay in the postanesthesia care unit.