Anesth. for Thoracic Surgery Flashcards
Wiggly-arm's powerpoint on thoracic surgery. Pretty much all the crap on the slides.
6 disease states that would require thoracic surgery?
- lung tumors
- esophageal disease
- mediastinal tumors
- infection
- bronchiectasis
- thoracic aneurysms
Name 2 endoscopy procedures and 2 mediastinal procedures.
Endoscopy:
- bronchoscopy
- esophagoscopy
Mediastinal:
- mediastinoscopy
- thymectomy
Should you put in an A-line for all major thoracic surgeries?
yes, yes you should.
What type of anesthesia can be done for a bronchoscopy with a flexible scope? How about with a rigid scope?
MAC or GETA for flexible scope
GETA for a rigid scope
What are some complications that can occur from endoscopic procedures? (4, or so)
- facial, dental, laryngeal injury
- airway rupture, pneumothorax
- hemorrhage
- airway obstruction – blood, FB, edema
What are some things to consider when doing an endoscopic procedure? (7)
- Small ETT vs. Double-lumen tube
- Laser tube and laser precautions
- Short-acting hypnotic agent
- Inhaled agents vs TIVA
- Short-acting narcotics
- Short-acting muscle relaxant
- Local anesthesia – post-op
What are the two types of approaches for a mediastinoscopy?
cervical
anterior (Chamberlain procedure)
What are complications associated with mediastinoscopy procedures? (7)
- # 1 Rupture/laceration to major vessels
- # 2 Pneumo (Hemo)-thorax
- Intermittent occlusion of R innominate artery
- Tracheal collapse
- Tension pneumomediastinum
- Mediastinitis
- Chylothorax
Surgeries that require a median sternotomy? (3)
- Thymectomy
- Mediastinal masses
- Sternotomy for Bilateral Pulmonary Resection
Thymectomy is the treatment of choice for what?
myasthenia gravis
autoimmune disease that causes a decrease in the number of post-junctional ACh receptors
Should a myasthenia gravis patient hold their anticholinesterase medications on the day of surgery?
yes
What is different about the Eaton-Lambert Syndrome from traditional myasthenia gravis?
Easton-Lambert Syndrome is an autoimmune disorder that causes a pre-junctional decrease in ACH release. It does not affect the receptors.
In these patients, the symptoms will improve with exertion.
Things to consider prior to anesthesia for mediastinal masses. (5)
- Degree of functional impairment
- Orthopnea
- Supine & upright PFT’s
- Specific CT report/examination
- Close communication with surgeon
Things to consider for a dynamic airway obstruction. (3)
- Position/muscle tension dependent
- Fine with upright/spont vent, dead with supine & relaxed
- What if you can’t ventilate even with properly placed ETT? –> Rigid bronch emergently, position change, spont vent
Name a few open thorax procedures. (8 referenced in his slides)
- Lung Biopsy/Pleurodesis
- Lung Resection (W<P)
- Lung Cysts and Bullae
- Intrapulmonary Hemorrage
- Bronchopleural Fistula & Empyema
- Esophageal Surgery
- Tracheal Resection
- Lung Transplantation
What are 4 indications for lung isolation?
- control of foreign material (lung abcess, hemoptysis, etc)
- airway control (bronchopleural-cutaneous [B-p] fistula)
- surgical exposure (lung resection, VATS, etc.)
- special procedures (lung lavage, differential ventilation)
Things to consider during the preop evaluation for lung isolation procedures. (5)
- Laboratory Tests
- Prescreen for underlying pulmonary infection,
- Tracheal stenosis (positional dyspnea, airway collapse, hypoxemia, anatomic narrowing)
- Review ABG, PFT, CXR, V/Q Scan, CT/MRI (lesion and trachea), angiography
- Coexisting pathology
If a patient is having a lung procedure done and their Hct is < 25%, should they be transfused?
yes, because adequate oxygen carrying capacity is essential.
also, type and cross for 2-4 units of PRBC