Click the links below to access content on each subject area pertaining to Surgical and Diagnostic Anesthesia, Including Management of Complications.
Intra – Abdominal
HEPATOBILIARY
GASTROINTESTINAL
PHEOCHROMOCYTOMA
RENAL/GENITOURINARY
BREAST
PLASTICS and/or RECONSTRUCTIVE
REFERENCE: Barash, Clinical Anesthesia 9th edition, pages 839-841
OTOLARYNGOLOGICAL
OPHTHALMOLOGIC
NASAL
CRANIOFACIAL
Le Fort I – Horizontal fracture of the maxilla extending from the floor of the nose and hard palate, through the nasal septum, and through the pterygoid plates posteriorly.
Le Fort II – A triangular fracture running from the bridge of the nose, through the medial and inferior wall of the orbit, beneath the zygoma, and through the lateral wall of the maxilla and the pterygoid plates.
Le Fort III – Fracture totally separates the midfacial skeleton from the cranial base, traversing the root of the nose, the ethmoid bone, the eye orbits, and the sphenopalatine fossa.
Nasal intubation is acceptable in the trauma patient who has a Le Fort I facial fracture.
PLASTICS and/or RECONSTRUCTIVE
ORTHODONTIC/DENTAL
Intracranial
Acetylcholine Histamine Dopamine Norepinephrine Substance P Glutamate Glycine GABA | Cholinergic receptors Requires cyclic adenosine monophosphate Basal ganglia Reticular activating system and hypothalamus Substantia gelatinosa Cerebral cortex and hippocampus Spinal cord Major inhibitory neurotransmitter in the CNS |
NEURO PHARMACOLOGY
DECOMPRESSION (BURR HOLES, VENTRICULOPERITONEAL SHUNT)
SPACE-OCCUPYING LESION
VASCULAR
TRANSSPHENOIDAL HYPOPHYSECTOMY
STEREOTACTIC PROCEDURES
Open Procedures (CABG)
ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY
CABG
ANESTHESIA
COAGULATION
CARDIOPULMONARY BYPASS
OPEN CARDIAC PROCEDURES
COMPLICATIONS
Minimally Invasive Procedures (Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement / Implantation, Left Atrial Appendage Closure Implant, Mitral Clips)
Interventional Cardiology (Pacemakers, Automated Internal Cardiac Defibrillator Devices, Electrophysiology Cases
Management of Patients with Cardiac Devices (Ventricular Assist Device, Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation, Intraarterial Balloon Pump
DIAPHRAGM
ENDOSCOPIC PROCEDURES (BRONCHOSCOPY, MEDIASTINOSCOPY)
MEDIASTINOSCOPY
ESOPHAGUS
LUNG
ONE-LUNG VENTILATION (OLV)
MANAGEMENT OF OLV
OTHERS
THORACOTOMY
MEDIASTINUM
COCAINE LIDOCAINE BENZOCAINE BUPIVACAINE | Vasoconstrictive properties Rapid onset Can produce methemoglobinemia Long duration of action |
LARYNX/TRACHEA
TRACHEAL RECONSTRUCTION
TRACHEOSTOMY
ENDOSCOPIC SINUS SURGERIES
LYMPH NODE BIOPSIES
PARATHYROID/THYROID
HYPERTHYROID
HYPOTHYROID
PERIOPERATIVE
HYPERPARATHYROID
PERIOPERATIVE
HYPOPARATHYROID
NECK TUMORS
RADICAL NECK DISSECTION
TONSILLECTOMY
CERVICAL SPINE (ANTERIOR AND POSTERIOR APPROACH)
LAMINECTOMY/DISCECTOMY FUSIONS
PAIN MANAGEMENT PROCEDURES
OTHER
ARTHROSCOPIC
CLOSED REDUCTION
FRACTURES
TOTAL JOINT REPLACEMENTS/ARTHOPLASTY
HAND/FOOT PROCEDURES
OTHERS
GYNECOLOGIC
GENITOURINARY
TURP
UROLITHIASIS
CAROTID
THORACIC
ABDOMINAL (including RENAL)
TYPES OF ENDO LEAKS
Type 1 | Leak is at the proximal or distal graft attachment site. |
Type 2 | Aneurysm grows, not because of a leak, due to retrograde flow that is filling the sac. Lumbar or inferior mesenteric arteries are the culprit. |
Type 3 | Graft defect from a fabric tear or disconnection of the modular overlap. |
Type 4 | Graft wall porosity. |
Type 5 | No identifiable cause for the increase in aneurysm size. |
Types 1 and 3 require re-intervention.
EXTREMITY
OCCLUSIVE DISEASE
REPAIR TYPE | DIRECT | EXTRA-ANATOMIC |
SURGICAL SITES | Aortoiliac Aortofemoral | Axillary-femoral Femoral-femoral |
PATENCY RATE | >80% | 55-80% |
MORBIDITY/MORTALITY | Greater | Less |
ANESTHESIA MGMT | -Like open AAA -Less hemodynamic instability with clamping than AAA -Invasive central monitoring and arterial BP | -No aorta clamp/unclamp; instead axillary/femoral -Less cardiac alterations than direct approach -Arterial BP monitored on opposite side; no invasive |
THROMBOEMBOLIC PREVENTION
SURGICAL MANAGEMENT OF PORTAL HYPERTENSION
DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING AND RADIOLOGY
X-RAYS AND FLUROSCOPY
IV CONTRAST
ELECTROCONVULSIVE THERAPY
INTERVENTIONAL RADIOLOGY
ANGIOGRAPHY
INTERVENTIONAL NEURORADIOLOGY
COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY (CT)
RADIOFREQUENCY ABLATION
TRANSJUGULAR INTRAHEPATIC PORTOSYSTEMIC SHUNT (TIPS)
MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING (MRI)
CARDIOLOGY
RADIATION THERAPY
ENDOSCOPY
REFERENCE: Barash Chapter 33
ROBOTIC
LAPAROSCOPY
COMPLICATIONS
TRAUMA
AIRWAY
RESUSCITATION
NEUROLOGIC
BURNS
inflammatory response (burn shock). After 24-72 hours, the hypermetabolic phase begins where the major mediators are catecholamines and corticosteroids.
CARBON MONOXIDE
ORGAN TRANSPLANTS (including MANAGEMENT OF POSTTRANSPLANT PATIENT FOR NONTRANSPLANT SURGERY)
LIVER
LUNG
RENAL
HEART
MANAGEMENT FOR NONTRANSPLANT SURGERY
ORGAN PROCUREMENT
LASER PROCEDURES
CO2 LASER