| Literature DB >> 16927929 |
Abstract
There is a strong possibility that the risk from anesthesia and surgery carries over from the immediate perioperative period to more remote time points. This extended risk seems to influence the progression, severity, and complication rate of certain chronic illnesses, such as vascular heart disease and some of the malignancies, although other disease processes might be affected as well. With the recognition that the perioperative process could be responsible for later adverse events comes the need to reassess existing patient safety models, because some of the risk could be preventable. To confront these challenges, it is necessary to understand the underlying biology of this association, and immunology should be particularly helpful in this pursuit. It will be of special importance to integrate our knowledge of the host immune response to anesthesia and surgery with the recent revelations on the role of immunity in the progression of many of the chronic diseases. Additionally, we need to examine how genetic diversity or acquired defects alter the immune response to tissue injury and infection so that we can improve risk stratification and preemptive therapies. In the meantime, we must strive to improve short- and long-term outcomes by expanding our efforts to reduce disease activity preoperatively, to control the surgical stress response and infection rate, and to use tissue-preserving surgical techniques. Long-term patient safety after anesthesia and surgery is not a specialty-by-specialty endeavor; it requires a highly collaborative, institutional, and national effort to foster innovative research and health care process improvements.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16927929 DOI: 10.1016/j.atc.2006.03.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anesthesiol Clin ISSN: 1932-2275