Week 10 - Anesthesia for Vascular Disease Flashcards
What is Atherosclerosis? Where are the most common sites?
Chronic disorder of the arterial wall that involves development of atheromatous plaque that compromises the blood supply to any or all of the vital organs or the extremities and leads to the clinical manifestations of myocardial infarction (MI), stroke, and gangrene
- most common cause of occlusive disease
- most common sites are coronary arteries, carotid bifurcation, abdominal aorta, and iliac and femoral arteries
What are the risk factors for atherosclerosis?
- Cigarette smoking
- High cholesterol
- Elevated Triglycerides
- Diabetes Mellitus
- Obesity/Sedentary Lifestyle
- Genetic Predisposition
- Male gender > risk than Females
- C reactive Protein – Link btw inflammation and atherosclerosis
What is peripheral vascular disease? What are the symptoms?
The result of atherosclerosis and atheromatous plaque formation
Symptoms: claudication, skin ulcerations, gangrene, impotence
Extent of overall disability is determined by the development of collateral blood flow – early on the collateral flow can meet the O2 needs but as disease progresses these needs cannot be met leading to limb ischemia
*mortality for PVD is 2-6x higher than general public
What are common co-existing diseases in patients with peripheral vascular disease?
- CAD
- Hx of MI
- Hx of angina
- HTN
- CHF
- Pulmonary Disease
- Renal Insufficiency
- Diabetes
- Cerebrovascular Disease
What are patient renal function considerations for vascular surgery?
Preop creatinine clearance <60 mL/min = independent predictor of short and long term mortality after elective vascular surgery
Careful attention to volume status – fluctuation of intravascular volume and CO can significantly compromise renal perfusion during intraop and postop periods
What are the advantages of perioperative beta blockade in vascular procedures?
- Periop beta blocker and statin admin decrease risk of death in vascular surgery pts w/ renal impairment
- Advantages include affects myocardial O2 supply and demand and judicious use is recommended for pts at high risk for MI
What are the advantages of perioperative statin therapy in vascular surgery?
Lipid lowering properties as well as anti-inflammatory, plaque stabilizing and antioxidant effects
- should be initiated 30 days prior to surgical procedure
- has emerged as promising therapy for prevention of cardiac complications in vascular surgery pts
Is antiplatelet therapy recommended in vascular surgery?
Remains controversial topic
-POISE 2 trial showed periop ASA does NOT prevent MI, does NOT alter risk of periop cardiac event, but DID increase risk of major bleeding
What ekg lead is best to assess cardiac ischemia?
V5
What are common vascular procedures?
- Transluminal Angioplasty
- Endartarectomy
- Thrombectomies
- Endovascular Stenting
- Arterial bypass: aortofemoral, axillofemoral, femofemoral, femoropopliteal
What is the anesthetic management for vascular procedures?
- Multiple PIVs (large bore, cordis, RIC)
- A line is a must (use arm w/ higher pressure if variation)
- GETA vs Regional/MAC (be mindful of volume status, hidden blood loss, monitor labs as needed, frequent blood draws)
What are the cardiovascular benefits of epidural anesthesia in vascular surgery?
- Decreases myocardial oxygen demand and afterload
- Increases endocardial perfusion at ischemic zone
- Increases hemodynamic stability
- Decreases blood loss
- Decreases general anesthetic medication requirements
- Redistributes blood to lower extremities
What are the pulmonary benefits of epidural anesthesia in vascular surgery?
- Decreased effect on FVC, FEV, and PEFR
- Decreases ventilation perfusion mismatch
- Improves atrioventricular oxygen differentiation
- Decreases pulmonary postop complications
- Decreases incidence of thromboembolism
What are the postop considerations for vascular surgery?
Pain management – combination of IV narcotic and/or epidural pain management is needed (improves pt comfort, decrease cardiac instability due to more relaxed physiologic state)
Appropriate post op monitoring is important (PACU, ICU, etc)
What are the risk factors for abdominal aortic aneurysms?
Obesity Smoking (most highly correlated - 5x) HTN Diabetes Gender Age