GENERAL ANAESTHESIA Katarina Zadrazilova FN Brno, 2014 ..aims • What do anaesthetists do • Basic anaesthetic management • Drugs, gases, monitoring, machines The role of anaesthetist • Ensures safe anaesthesia for surgery • Is responsible for patient safety in theatre • Ensures the anaesthetic machine and drugs are checked and correct • Liase with the surgeon and scrub team – ensure that the operation can proceed smoothly • Keep an anaesthetic record • Makes a postoperative plan Anaesthetic plan • Preoperative • Intraoperative • And postoperative management Anaesthetic plan • Preoperative • Intraoperative • And postoperative management Preoperative management • Anaesthetic assessment :history and examination • Relevant investigations : lab, CXR, ECG • Optimise chronic condition • Plan for intra and post op pain refief • Discuss ev. HDU/ICU post op bed for patient • Consent the patient • Prescribe premedication Anaesthetic assessment • Previous surgery (GA, LA, complications) • Medical hx, Medication, FH • Allergies • Last meal, drink ! • Teeth • Pregnancy • Examination: airway assessment, neck, back + general physical exam. Risk assessment – ASA grade I Healthy patient II Mild systemic disease, no functional limitations III Severe systemic disease- definite functional limitation IV Severe systemic disease that is a constant threat to life V Moribund patient not expected to survive 24 hours with or without operation Premedication • Sedation/anxiolysis (Benzodiazepines) • Analgesia only if pain (opioids) • Reduce airway secretions + heart rate control + hemodynamic stability • Prevent bronchospasm • Prevent and/or minimize the impact of aspiration • Decrease post-op nausea/vomiting Consent • Discuss all options GA/regional • Risks versus benefits • Complications – common, rare and serious • Make pain relief plan Complications NO RISK = NO ANAESTHESIA • Common (someone in a street) ▫ PONV, sore throat, backache, headache, dizziness • Rare and serious (someone in a big town) ▫ Damage to the eyes, anaphylactic shock, death, equipment failure Mortality of anaesthesia (ASA I) • Risk of death or brain damage ▫ 1: 100 000 – 200 000 • Dying in a plane crash ▫ 1 : 200 000 • Dying in a car crash ▫ 1 : 5000 Anaesthetic plan • Preoperative • Intraoperative • And postoperative management Teamwork ! anaesthetist ODP surgeon scrub nurse Operating theatre Operating theatre • Allow surgery, ECT • Allow diagnostic method (CT, MRI) History • Opium (Egypt, Syria) ▫ Hippokrates 400 BC ease pain • 1555 Andreas Vesalius - arteficial ventilation through tube between vocal cords, ventricular fibrilation (animals) • Valerius Cordus (1546) ether • 1773 N2O Joseph Priestley (1733-1804) Beginning of GA • October 16th 1846 ether general anaesthesia Boston dentist William Thomas Green Morton to Gilbert Abbott (tumor of mandibule) • February 6th 1847 Prague - first czech ether anaesthesia - Celestýn Opitz • 1895 direct laryngoscopy Alfred Kirstein in Berlin. AIMS OF ANAESTHESIA Triad of anaesthesia • Neuromuscular blocking agents for muscle relaxation • Analgesics/regional anaesthesia for analgesia • Anaesthetic agents to produce unconsciousness Stages of anaesthetics • Induction – putting asleep • Maintenance – keeping the patient asleep • Reversal – waking up the patient Intravenous anaesthetics • Onset of anaesthesia within one arm – brain circulation time – 30 sec • Effect site brain ▫ Propofol ▫ Thiopentale ▫ Etomidate Anaesthetic gases • Isoflurane • Sevoflurane • Halothane • Enflurane • Desflurane • N2O – nitrous oxide Inhalational anaesthetics Anaesthetic gases • Used for maintainance, sometimes induction • Anaesthetic ‘gases’ are administered via vaporizers Inhalational anaesthetics Induction + maintenance Intravenous anaesthetics Muscle relaxants - NMBs • Tracheal intubation • Surgery where muscle relaxation is essential • Mechanical ventilation • Place of effect neuromuscular junction • History - South American Indians (kurare) Neuromuscular blocking agents Analgesics • Simple : paracetamol, NSAID • Opioids : morhine, fentanyl ▫ Via opioid receptors MORPHEUS- GREAK GOD OF DREAMS Monitoring • Basic: ▫ NIBP, ECG, Sat, ETCO2, FiO2 • Extended: ▫ Nerve stimulator, temperature, diuresis, IBP, CO, CVP, perioperative acid-base, lab • Mix gases, ventilate, preserve heat and moisture High pressure central gas supply/ cylinder Low pressure system • Flowmeters • Vaporisers • Breathing circuit: ▫ bag + tubes ▫ valves (uni directional) ▫ CO2 absorber • Ventilator Anaesthetic machine Anaesthetic machine Airway management Indication for intubation: • Need of relaxation or PPV • Full stomach • Orotracheal intubation, nasotracheal intubation with direct laryngoscopy • Tracheotomy • Laryngeal mask • Cricothyreotomy Intubation Laryngeal Mask Anaesthetic plan • Preoperative • Intraoperative • And postoperative management Postoperative care • ICU/HDU or ward • Monitoring according to type of surgery and patient’s condition • Post-operative pain control • Lab check up • Infusion therapy, blood loss monitoring Questions ?