Articles: postoperative-complications.
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Postoperative negative pressure pulmonary edema (NPPE) can occur in any patient undergoing general anesthesia. There are several risk factors for it, especially postoperative laryngospasm. The disease is usually benign and quickly reversible. In our case the severity and need for advanced critical care therapy was unusual. ⋯ NPPE is a rare but relevant complication of anesthesia and laryngospasm. The disease can basically occur in any patient undergoing general anesthesia and therefore should be considered.
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Review Meta Analysis
Incidence and relative risk of delirium after major surgery for patients with pre-operative depression: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
Patients with past depression or depressive-symptoms preoperatively have significantly greater risk of post-operative delirium (RR 1.91, 95% CI 1.68-2.17).
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Multicenter Study
Frailty and decisional regret after elective noncardiac surgery: a multicentre prospective cohort study.
Frailty is associated with patient surgical-regret at 1 year post-op among older patients, particularly for non-orthopaedic surgery.
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Higher inspired oxygen fraction during one-lung ventilation is not independently associated with postoperative pulmonary complications.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Nov 2024
Effect of Changing Estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate Formula on Sugammadex Use and Pulmonary Complications for African American and non-African American Patients.
Sugammadex is associated with fewer postoperative pulmonary complications than is neostigmine reversal of neuromuscular blockade. However, the Food and Drug Administration-approved package insert states that its use is "not recommended" in severe renal impairment, separately defined as creatinine clearance <30 mL/min. Recently, the formula for estimating glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was updated to remove the race variable. Compared to the prior formula, the new consensus equation lowers the estimated GFR for African American patients and raises it for everyone else. We sought to determine how this change could differently impact the use of sugammadex, and thus the rate of pulmonary complications, for both African American and non-African American patients. ⋯ The recent change in GFR formulas may potentially be associated with an increase in postoperative pulmonary complications in African American patients and a decrease in postoperative pulmonary complications in non-African American patients through GFR-driven changes in sugammadex use.