Case 49 - Jevoha witness and scoliosis Flashcards
Define scoilosis and how is the curvature assessed in patients with scoliosis?
Scoliosis
- lateral curvature of the spine
- lateral curvature are associated with rotation of vertebrae and can result in deformity of rib cage
Cobb Angle
- measures curvature of scoliosis
- perpendicular lines drawn at uppermost border of curvature and lowermost border of curvature
- angle made by intersecting perpendicular lines = degree of curvature
What will a jehovah’s witness refuse and accept in terms of blood transfusion?
- JWs believe that blood removed from body must be discarded
- many refuse whole blood transfusion and its components (FFP, PLT, Cryo, WBC, plasma)
- need to discuss with JW about nonblood alternative such as albumin, factor concentrate, cell savage with a continuous circut.
What conditions are associated with scoliosis?
- idiopathic scoliosis is most common form
Associated conditions include:
- Marfan syndrome
- Ehlers-Danlos syndrome
- RA
- osteogensis imperfecta
What is you pre-op evaluation for a scoliotic patient?
History and Physical
- etiology (marfan, ehlers-danlos)
- coexisting diseases present
- Cobb angle
- degree may indicates cardiopulmonary involvement
- 50 to 60 degree - lung function abnormalities
- cardiovascular impairment
Labs
- Coags: PT/INR, PTT
- CBC (hgb + plt)
- Blood type and crossmatching (large blood loss expected)
- ABG
- in presence of severe pulmonary disease
what tests would you want to consider pre-operatively in a scoliotic patient?
Tests
- PFT
- restrictive lung disease most common
- if obstructive disease present, is there response to bronchodilators
- Spirometry (FVC, FEV1, V1/VC)
- lung volumes
- poor VC may indicate postop ventilation
- Echo
- severe restrictive lung disease –> pulm HTN (cor pulmonale) –> RVH and R CHF
- R chf = jvd, hepatomegaly, peripheral edema
- severe restrictive lung disease –> pulm HTN (cor pulmonale) –> RVH and R CHF
- CXR
What are intraop anesthetic considerations for posterior spinal fusion surgery?
1) Talk to surgeon
- wake up test or no wake up test
- SSEP, MEPs
2) pre meds
* if patient has significant resp dysfunction, avoid preop sedation as hypoxemia, hypercarbia, and acidosis worsens pulmonary pressures
3) Induction
- peds - inhalation induction; mature - iv induction
- SSEPS
- inhaled anes < 0.5 MAC, propofol, remifentanil
- consider muscle relaxants if MEPs not used
- MEPs
- avoid muscle relaxants
- inhaled anes < 0.5 MAC, propofol, remifentanil
4) Monitors
- standard montiors
-
arterial line
- beat to beat BP monitoring
- blood sampling
- CVC
- depends on IV access, pressor therapy, cardiac function
- TEE
- if severe cardiopulmonary disease
5) normothermia
* avoid hypothermia, forced air warming blankets, IV fluid warming systems
How would you position this patient undergoing poseterior spinal surgery?
- avoid pressure on eye, ears, nose
- proper alignment of head and neck
- chest, abdomen, pelvis should be free of compression (avoid pressure on axilla, breasts, and genitalia)
- arms at sides with elbows flexed and shoulders abducted no greater than 90 degrees (avoid stretching of brachial plexus)
What are strategies to minimize blood loss and need for homologous blood transfusion during posterior spine surgery?
1) Pre op erythropoietin
2) acute normovolemic hemodilution
3) intraop cell salavage with retransfusion
4) surgical technique
5) antifibrinolytics (amicar, transexamic acid)
6) anesthesia induced hypotension
- MAP 50-60 is ideal
- maintains adequate spinal cord perfusion and CBF
- deepen anesthetic (volatile, remifentail)
- vasodilators (NTG, SNP)
- CCB (nicardipine)
- BB - Labetalol
What is the wake-up test?
- patients are awakened intraoperatively to test motor tracts
-
assess anterior spinal cord (motor) pathways after spinal instrumentation
- does not assess sensory (posterior spinal cord)
- patient asked to squeeze the hand followed by moving the feet
- if patient unable to move feet, spinal distraction must be decreased
- after test, return to general anesthesia
what are the cons of wake up test
Cons
- evaluates patient’s motor function at only one point in time
- after the test, the possiblity of spinal cord injury still exists
- not appropriate for young children or cognitvely impaired patients
- excessive patient movement –> self extubation, bleeding, air embolus, disruption of surgical instrumentation
what are post-op anesthetic considerations after scoliosis repair?
- goal at end of sx = awake and extubate
- may need to delay extubation for underlying pulmonary dysfunction, persistent muscle weakness, issues reated to coexisting diseases
- monitor in ICU post-operatively
complications
- bleding
- atelectasis / resp distres
- neurologic deficits
Pain
- epidural placed by sx
- IV PCA
- continuous opioid infusion