Anaesthetics - Conduct of Anaesthesia Flashcards

1
Q

What Do Anaesthetists Do?

A

Pre-operative Assessment

Perioperative Medicine (caring for patients around time of operation)

Pain Medicine

Critical Care/Intensive Care Medicine

Anaesthesia

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2
Q

What is a General Anaesthetic?

A

Period of controlled unconsciousness

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3
Q

what are the different stages and phases?

(The actual anaesthetic has 4 main stages in bold)

A

Pre-operative assessment and planning (Begins well before arriving in the operating theatre)

Preparation (making sure everything is set up for patients arrival and everything is as safe and slick as possible)

Induction - when the patient goes to sleep

Maintenance - keeping the patient asleep

Emergence - process of waking up

Recovery - period after anaesthetic where the patient hasnt fully recovered from the anaesthetic yet

Post-operative Care

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4
Q

what needs to be done pre-operativley with the patient?

A

Not jus information gathering, also to give information and gain consent for any additional procedures like nerve blocks

Need to work hard to get people to trust us

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5
Q

what preparation is needed?

A

Right people (One of these people is an anaesthetist and the other is anaesthetic assistant who is usually a highly trained nurse or a operating department practitioner)

Right skills (Need a specialised anaesthetist for any specialised type of surgeries)

Right place

Right time (Important to know not to do elective procedures out of hours)

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6
Q

what do you need to do with this machine before hand? and what need to be done with the team?

A

Machine Checks and Brief

Series of monitors, ventilator and other things to keep patient comfortable and asleep

Lots of safety features

Team brief – whole team talks through a case and make sure of any issues that may come up

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7
Q

when you check in a patient, what information needs to be checked?

A

Correct patient

Correct procedure

Correct (and marked) site

Consent

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8
Q

—Monitoring - Association of Anaesthetists minimum standard:

5 minimum standards of monitoring - Every anaesthetic must have these 5 things working before, what are they?

A

ECG (As arrhythmias are possible under anaesthesia) - 3 lead ECG, one each shoulder then on left side of the chest - green

Oxygen saturation - Finger for adult or toe on a child - blue line

Non-invasive blood pressure (As patients often drop BP under anaesthetic) - cuff on patients arm - bottom pink

End Tidal C02 (Amount of CO2 in the gas that the patient is breathing out and allows us to check things like the patency of the patients airway) - Small plastic tube attached to breathing circuit we use to give patient O2 - grey

Airway Pressure Monitoring (picture on front of card) - Graph at bottom is airway pressure – gives good info on how we are ventilating patient and patency of their airway

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9
Q

Monitoring Standard - Every anaesthetic must have these in place before it is commenced - what are they?

A

ECG

NIBP

Saturations

ETC02

Airway Pressure

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10
Q

Ture or false?

Blood pressure normally goes up under anaesthesia

A

False (often vasodilate patients)

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11
Q

Ture or false?

End tidal CO2 measures how much CO2 the patient breathes in

A

False (its how much the patient breathes out)

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12
Q

Ture or false?

There are 5 pieces of monitoring that must be present before a GA is given

A

True

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13
Q

what is pictured here that is often needed to give the anaesthetics?

A

Intravenous Access

Need good reliable IV access

Need a canula before the are anaesthetised

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14
Q

Pre-oxygenation:

100% oxygen for a couple minutes before they are anaesthetised

Why do we give supplemental oxygen?

A

Increase time to desaturation

Reduced Functional Residual Capacity under anaesthesia (total volume of lungs reduced as your muscles relax and reduced FRC means there is less oxygen for blood to take so less time before the patient begins to desaturate)

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15
Q

what s the first phase of anaesthesia?

A

induction

First phase of anaesthetic

Can be IV or inhalation

Inhalation often for small children who cant tolerate cannula being put in

IV is fast and inhalation slow

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16
Q

what drugs are used for induction?

A

Analgesic - Fentanyl, Alfentanil

Hypnotic - Propofol (most common, white sutff in picture), Thiopentone, Ketamine

Muscle Relaxant

Multi stage approach if IV

Get first 2 and sometimes a muscle relaxant to

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17
Q

Planes of Anaesthesia - is it an on/off switch?

A

no

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18
Q

whata re the Planes of Anaesthesia?

(Hard to see in IV as so quick but will see in inhalation)

A

1: Analgesia and amnesia
2: Delirium to unconsciousness
3: Surgical anaesthesia
4: Apnoea to death (want to avoid)

19
Q

All patients under anaesthesia need some degree of airway management, why is this?

A

Loss of airway reflexes

Relaxation of tissues

20
Q

Airway Management:

what type of airway management is shown?

A

tripple airway maneuver

21
Q

Airway Management:

what type of airway management is shown?

A

Anaesthetic mask

Same mask as pre-oxygenation

many sizes

22
Q

Airway Management:

what type of airway management is shown?

A

Oropharyngeal airway

“Guedel”

May sometimes use a oropharyngeal airway

Get a tongue that may of slipped backwards

Give a clear path of mouth to upper airway

23
Q

Airway Management:

what type of airway management is shown?

A

Laryngeal Mask Airway (LMA)

Same as a mask over the face but sits on the larynx

Provides tight seal to direct gas flow towards patients airway

24
Q

Airway Management:

what type of airway management is shown?

A

Endotracheal Tube (ETT)

More definitive airways management

Sits within the trachea

Cuffed tube, balloon at end protects patient airway form anything coming past the cuff

Inserted using laryngoscope

25
Q

what are the reasons to intubate?

A

Protection from aspiration (patients who are unfasted)

Need for muscle relaxation

Shared airway (surgery of mouth or face)

Need for tight C02 control

Minimal access to patient

26
Q

3 options for how the patient breaths during surgery, what are they?

A

Spontaneous ventilation (patient breathes themselves)

Controlled ventilation (we take over it completely)

Supported ventilation (mixture of the 2)

27
Q

how are anaethatists involved in the patients circulation?

A

Control of haemodynamics (changes are common) - BP at least every 5 minutes

Vasoactive drugs (tighten up blood vessels to maintain blood pressure may be needed)

28
Q

what are the risks of induction?

A

Anaphylaxis (to the agents we use)

Regurgitation and aspiration (that’s why we ask patient to be fasted for when they come for operations)

Airway obstruction and hypoxia

Laryngospasm (vocal cords constricting stopping gas getting into lungs)

Cardiovascular instability

Rarely, cardiac arrest

29
Q

What Other Risks Are There?

what is the risk of Awareness?

A

1:8200-1:135900

One of the biggest concerns a patient will come with

Not common but there are things to increase patients risk

1 in 8200 is for those getting muscle relaxants and 1 in 135900 for those getting no muscle relaxant

Movement under anaesthesia is not a sign of awareness but things like tachycardia, high BP or sweaty (all these are called sign of lightness in anaesthetic)

use Depth of Anaesthesia Monitoring:

  • Measure amount of anaesthetic agent being breathed in and out
  • Can also use limited ECG/EMG??
  • Depth of anaesthesia monitor is being applied to the patient head and this is a limited EMG called BIS
30
Q

What Other Risks Are There?

what is the risk of Eye Injury?

A

1:1000

Patients don’t naturally close eyes during anaesthetic so can dry out and also cant protect eyes

Close eyes or place lubricating matter in the eyes

31
Q

What Other Risks Are There?

what is the risk of Hypothermia?

A

1:25-1:2

Major concern

Vasodilation drops core temperature

More covered up the patient then less the risk

Use forced warm air blankets to keep patient warm

32
Q

What Other Risks Are There?

what is the risk of a Pressure Injury?

A

1:5

Patients don’t move under analgesia

Pads at different areas

Be aware of where cables are

33
Q

What Other Risks Are There?

what is the risk of VTE?

A

1:100-1:4

Risk varies Widley on what operation the patient is getting and on the patient factors

VTE Prophylaxis:

  • Keeping patients active as long as before surgery
  • TED stockings
  • White things on patients calf’s are flowtrons which inflate and deflate to pump blood out of the patients legs
34
Q

What Other Risks Are There?

what is the risk of Nerve Injury?

A

1:1000

Peripheral nerves can become damaged

Any nerve over a bony prominence are at particular risk, common ones are the ulnar and common perineal nerve

Also possible to injury brachial plexus through poor positioning and poor padding

Careful positioning and pressure point padding can help

35
Q

What Other Risks Are There?

overall what are all the risks under anaesthesia?

A

Awareness (1:8200, 1:135900)

Eye Trauma (1:1000)

Hypothermia (~1:25-1:2)

Pressure injury (1:5)

Nerve injury (1:1000)

Thromboembolism (1:100-1:4)

36
Q

how is maintenance done during surgery?

A

Vapour (“gas”)

Intravenous anaesthesia (TIVA)

37
Q

What is the Anaesthetist Doing (during surgery)?

A

Vigilance

Constant adjustment (how much anaesthetic they are getting and hemodynamics and other factors)

Anticipation (blood loss/fluid shifts/major events)

Key moments in surgery

Analgesia (individualized plan for patient)

Anti-emesis (common after anaesthetic and surgery)

Documentation

Communication

Advocacy

38
Q

what are the properties of Analgesia?

A

—Long-acting

—Multi-modal

—Intravenous vs local vs regional

39
Q

what are the features of Anti-emesis (drug that is effective against vomiting and nausea)?

A

—Multi-modal (often use multiple agents)

—Pharmacological vs non-pharmacological

—Risk assessed

40
Q

what documentation is required?

A
  • Prescription record
  • Observation chart
  • Ventilation chart
  • Fluid balance

(Anaesthetic chart seen in picture)

41
Q

what are the risk of Emergence?

T(his is the next stage, Process of waking up)

A

All same risks of “going to sleep”

42
Q

what is done in Emergence?

A

Theatre “sign out”

Reversal of neuromuscular blockade

Anaesthetic agent stopped

—Return of spontaneous breathing

Return of airway reflexes (start to see them swallowing or coughing)

Suctioning and removal of airway device

Transfer to recovery room

May be delirious on emergence

43
Q

what is involved in the recovery of a patient?

A

Specific area

Dedicated, highly trained staff

Manage ABC until “awake”

Initial post-operative analgesia

Management of nausea

Handover to ward

44
Q

Summary:

Phases of anaesthesia (_______________________________)

Care of the unconscious patient (__________)

A

Induction, maintenance, emergence, recovery

Risks, skills