Articles: anesthetics.
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All sectors of society must reduce their carbon footprint to mitigate climate change, and the healthcare community is no exception. This narrative review focuses on the environmental concerns associated with the emissions of volatile anaesthetic agents, some of which are potent greenhouse gases. ⋯ The state of knowledge of the environmental impact and possible climate forcing of emitted volatile anaesthetic agents are reviewed. Additionally, the review discusses how climate metrics can guide mitigation strategies to reduce emissions and suggests present and future options for mitigating the climate impact.
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Global Warming Potential vs Radiative Forcing
Global warming potential is "...the ratio of the cumulative radiative forcing (the energy being added to the planet, based on radiative efficiency and lifetime) over a time horizon from the instantaneous release of 1 kg of a given gas, such as desflurane, relative to that of 1 kg of carbon dioxide." A 100 year time horizon is commonly used as GWP100, reflecting the long lifetime of CO2, representing the warming potential of a single emission of a gas compared to the same mass of CO2. GWP is then used to derive CO2-equivalents.
Although GWP allows a simplistic comparison of greenhouse gases (eg. desflurane GWP 2530), it is misleading to use it to assess the climate impact of volatile anaesthetic agents primarily because of their short lifetimes, but also because "GWP does not consider the actual atmospheric abundance of a greenhouse gas, nor does it represent any of the physical complexity of the overall climate system..."
"Based on climate science, we assert that this is a physically unsound approach for determining the potential climate impact of volatile anaesthetic gases, and that it is the atmospheric concentration and radiative forcing of individual greenhouse gases that matter..." – Slingo & Slingo.
Instead climate scientists today prefer to use radiative forcing, "... the difference between the energy entering the planet and the energy leaving it..."
The percentage contribution of all volatile anaesthetic gases to radiative forcing is <0.01% compared to that from carbon dioxide. In comparison, the global emission reductions due to the COVID-19 lockdown were almost 1000x greater than the cumulative impact from anaesthetic volatile gases, and yet this reduction was undetectable above normal climate variability.
Atmospheric concentration (ppt) Atmospheric lifetime (y) (Effective) radiative forcing (Wm-2) Carbon dioxide 420,000,000 100+ 2.16 Methane 1,920,000 12.4 0.54 Nitrous oxide 336,000 123 0.21 Desflurane 0.37 14.1 0.00017 Sevoflurane 0.16 1.4 0.00003 Isoflurane 0.11 3.5 0.00006 "On the basis of GWP, anaesthetic gases appear to be very 'damaging'. However, this conclusion is scientifically unsound: their lifetimes are short; their emissions, accumulation and resulting atmospheric concentrations are minute; and their actual radiative forcing is vanishingly small."
More complexity...
Beyond the over-simplification of GWP and CO2e, Slingo & Slingo also explore the challenge in linking the minute radiative forcing of volatile anaesthetic gases to actual climate change and impact.
"...future warming will be determined by how successful we are in controlling our direct carbon dioxide emissions. ... While changing a vaporiser feels achievable and tangible, the scientific reality is inconsequential when we consider all the steps from GWP to climate impact. ... It is carbon dioxide emissions that will define our future, not the use of volatile anaesthetic agents."
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Reducing postoperative pain is still a tremendous challenge for perioperative clinicians. Lidocaine is a local anesthetic that belongs to the amide class and has anti-inflammatory, anti-hyperalgesic, and analgesic effects. Extensive research has been conducted to determine the optimal route for its administration. ⋯ This meta-analysis suggests that post-abdominal surgery intraperitoneal lidocaine administration has a better analgesic effect than intravenous lidocaine, with a lower pain score. However, intravenous lidocaine is more beneficial for gastrointestinal recovery after abdominal surgery.
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The environmental emissions attributed to anaesthetic nitrous oxide across the NHS are comparable to the carbon dioxide released by 135,000 flights from Frankfurt to New York. Much of these emissions are attributable to cumbersome and inadequately managed piped systems, resulting in excessive loss and waste. ⋯ Nitrous oxide mitigation efforts by grassroots and professional advocacy networks are enhanced through national centralised emission monitoring, distribution of data, technical information and provision of quality analysis. Given the climate harms of nitrous oxide, concerted efforts should be made to rationalise its use, and resources should be committed to supporting this at local, regional and national levels.
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The erector spinae plane block (ESPB) is perhaps one of the most interesting of the tissue plane blocks described recently. There has been an exponential increase in the number of publications for both adults and children over the past 5 years. ⋯ Anatomical differences in children, particularly in neonates and infants, may explain the spread in this age group. In most pediatric studies, erector spinae plane block was opioid sparing, and noninferiority was observed when compared with other regional techniques.