III. GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF ANESTHESIA

TOTAL INTRAVENOUS ANESTHESIA

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QUESTIONS

QUESTIONS

QUESTIONS

QUESTIONS

QUESTIONS

QUESTIONS

Total Intravenous Anesthesia

Total Intravenous Anesthesia

  • TIVA is a common choice for non-OR anesthetics, and usually consists of propofol along with fentanyl, remifentanil, or ketamine.
  • These drugs are given via infusion or bolus.
  • Advantages of TIVA vs inhalational anesthesia
    • Do not need gas scavenging
    • Reduced PONV
  • Discussed in a different section, the ERAS program, or enhanced recovery after surgery, aims to improve surgical outcomes and allow patients to return to normal activities as quickly as possible. TIVA is a main component to this focus because of the decreased chance of PONV vs general anesthesia.
  • Regarding evoked potentials, inhalational anesthetics have the greatest inhibitory effect that cause an amplitude decrease and wave latency increase. TIVA is helped in patients with neurological impairments.
    • Propofol and opioids have limited effect on somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEPs).
    • Etomidate and ketamine, however, can enhance SSEP waveforms.