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Anesthetic Considerations for the Critically Ill Pediatric Patient

Chapter by: Lau, Vincent; Mulladzhanov, Levi; Patel, Srikant; Gratz, Irwin; Gourkanti, Bharathi
in: Pediatric Anesthesia: A Guide for the Non-Pediatric Anesthesia Provider by Gourkanti, Bharathi; et al [Eds]
Singapore : Bentham Science Publishers, 2022
pp. 111-139
ISBN: 978-9815036282
CID: 5308322

Preoperative patient preparation in enhanced recovery pathways

Iqbal, Usama; Green, Jeremy B; Patel, Srikant; Tong, Yiru; Zebrower, Marcus; Kaye, Alan D; Urman, Richard D; Eng, Matthew R; Cornett, Elyse M; Liu, Henry
Enhanced recovery pathways are a novel approach focused on enhancing the care of surgical patients. "Prehabilitation" is the term applied to any intervention administered before surgery to reduce surgery-related morbidity, decrease the length of hospital stay, expedite the return of organ function, and facilitate the patient's return to normal life. A PubMed search was performed with the following key words: enhanced recovery, preoperative preparation, cessation of smoking and euvolemia. The results from this Pubmed search revealed that female patients may have higher levels of anxiety than male patients. Intensive smoking and alcohol cessation 6-8 weeks before elective surgery may reduce the incidence of postoperative morbidity. Preoperative exercise can be effective for reducing the postoperative complications like pulmonary complications and shortening the length of hospital stay. It is safe to allow patients to drink clear fluids up until 2 h before elective surgery (Level II evidence). Perioperative normoglycemia is the single most important factor to prevent surgical site infection. Intermittent pneumatic compression devices and low molecular weight heparin are effective in preventing postoperative thromboembolism. No advantage is gained by preoperative mechanical bowel preparation in elective colorectal surgery. The goal of preoperative fluid management is for the patient to arrive in the operating room in a hydrated and euvolemic state. Mild perioperative hypothermia may promote surgical wound infection by triggering thermoregulatory vasoconstriction, which decreases subcutaneous oxygen tension.
PMCID:6515717
PMID: 31142954
ISSN: 0970-9185
CID: 5274872

Enhanced Recovery Pathways for Cardiac Surgery

Coleman, Scott R; Chen, Ming; Patel, Srikant; Yan, Hong; Kaye, Alan D; Zebrower, Marcus; Gayle, Julie A; Liu, Henry; Urman, Richard D
PURPOSE OF REVIEW/OBJECTIVE:Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) has become a widespread topic in perioperative medicine over the past 20 years. The goals of ERAS are to improve patient outcomes and perioperative experience, reduce length of hospital stay, minimize complications, and reduce cost. Interventions and factors before, during, and after surgery all potentially play a role with the cumulative effect being superior quality of patient care. RECENT FINDINGS/RESULTS:Preoperatively, patient and family education, optimization of nutritional status, and antibiotic prophylaxis all improve outcomes. Recovery is also expedited by the use of multimodal analgesia, regional anesthesia, and opioid reducing approaches. Intraoperatively, the anesthesiologist can have an impact by using less-invasive monitors appropriately to guide fluid and hemodynamic management as well as maintaining normothermia. Postoperatively, early enteral feeding, mobilization, and removal of invasive lines support patient recovery. Implementation of ERAS protocol in cardiac surgery faces challenges by some unique perioperative perspectives in cardiac surgery, such as systemic anticoagulation, use of cardiopulmonary bypass, significantly more hemodynamic variations, larger volume replacement, postoperative intubation and mechanical ventilation and associated sedation, and potentially significantly more co-existing morbidities than other surgical procedures. ERAS in cardiac surgery may benefit patients more related to its high risk and high cost nature. This manuscript specifically reviews the unique aspects of enhanced recovery in cardiac surgery.
PMID: 30868281
ISSN: 1534-3081
CID: 5274862

Non-Invasive Cardiac Output Measurement: Where Are We Now?

Li, Mingqiang; Yang, Longqiu; Zhou, Liwen; liu, Jasmine; Patel, Srikant; Liu, Henry
ORIGINAL:0016031
ISSN: 2520-3002
CID: 5329152