Anaesthetics - Conduct of Anaesthesia Flashcards
What Do Anaesthetists Do?
Pre-operative Assessment
Perioperative Medicine (caring for patients around time of operation)
Pain Medicine
Critical Care/Intensive Care Medicine
Anaesthesia
What is a General Anaesthetic?
Period of controlled unconsciousness
what are the different stages and phases?
(The actual anaesthetic has 4 main stages in bold)
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
what needs to be done pre-operativley with the patient?
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
what preparation is needed?
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)
what do you need to do with this machine before hand? and what need to be done with the team?
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
when you check in a patient, what information needs to be checked?
Correct patient
Correct procedure
Correct (and marked) site
Consent
Monitoring - Association of Anaesthetists minimum standard:
5 minimum standards of monitoring - Every anaesthetic must have these 5 things working before, what are they?
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
Monitoring Standard - Every anaesthetic must have these in place before it is commenced - what are they?
ECG
NIBP
Saturations
ETC02
Airway Pressure
Ture or false?
Blood pressure normally goes up under anaesthesia
False (often vasodilate patients)
Ture or false?
End tidal CO2 measures how much CO2 the patient breathes in
False (its how much the patient breathes out)
Ture or false?
There are 5 pieces of monitoring that must be present before a GA is given
True
what is pictured here that is often needed to give the anaesthetics?
Intravenous Access
Need good reliable IV access
Need a canula before the are anaesthetised
Pre-oxygenation:
100% oxygen for a couple minutes before they are anaesthetised
Why do we give supplemental oxygen?
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)
what s the first phase of anaesthesia?
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
what drugs are used for induction?
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
Planes of Anaesthesia - is it an on/off switch?
no