Literature DB >> 26083137

Designing an operating theatre for awake procedures: A solution to improve multimodality information input.

Michel Wager1, Philippe Rigoard1, Benoit Bataille1, Claude Guenot2, Aurélie Supiot3, Jean-Luc Blanc1, Veronique Stal4, Claudette Pluchon5, Coline Bouyer5, Roger Gil5, Foucaud Du Boisgueheneuc5.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Many neurosurgical procedures are now performed with the patient aware in order to allow interactions between the patient and healthcare professionals. These procedures include awake brain surgery and spinal cord stimulation (SCS), lead placement for treatment of refractory chronic back and leg pain. Neurosurgical procedures under local anaesthesia require optimal intraoperative cooperation of the patient and all personnel involved in surgery. In addition to accommodating this extra source of intraoperative information all other necessary sources of data relevant to the procedure must be presented. The concept of an operating room dedicated to neurosurgical procedures performed aware and accommodating these concepts is presented, and some evidence for improvements in outcome presented, deriving from a series of patients implanted with spinal cord stimulators before and after the operating theatre was brought into service. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: In addition to the description, two videos demonstrate the facility online. Beyond this qualitative evidence, quantitative improvement in patient outcome is evidenced by the series presented: 91.3% of patients operated in the awake anaesthesia-dedicated theatre obtained adequate low back pain coverage, versus 60.0% for patients operated before (p = 0.028).
CONCLUSION: The concept of such an operating room is a step in improving the outcome by improving the presentation of all types of information to the operating room staff most notably in the example of aware procedures.

Entities:  

Keywords:  integrated operating room; neurosurgery under local anaesthesia; operative network; pain surgery; spinal cord stimulation

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26083137     DOI: 10.3109/02688697.2015.1054360

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Neurosurg        ISSN: 0268-8697            Impact factor:   1.596


  3 in total

1.  The Added Value of Intraoperative Hypnosis during Spinal Cord Stimulation Lead Implantation under Awake Anesthesia in Patients Presenting with Refractory Chronic Pain.

Authors:  Chantal Wood; Gaëlle Martiné; Gaëlle Espagne-Dubreuilh; Karine Le Goff; Maarten Moens; Lisa Goudman; Sandrine Baron; Romain David; Nicolas Naïditch; Maxime Billot; Philippe Rigoard
Journal:  Medicina (Kaunas)       Date:  2022-02-01       Impact factor: 2.430

2.  Combining Awake Anesthesia with Minimal Invasive Surgery Optimizes Intraoperative Surgical Spinal Cord Stimulation Lead Placement.

Authors:  Philippe Rigoard; Amine Ounajim; Lisa Goudman; Chantal Wood; Manuel Roulaud; Philippe Page; Bertille Lorgeoux; Sandrine Baron; Kevin Nivole; Mathilde Many; Emmanuel Cuny; Jimmy Voirin; Denys Fontaine; Sylvie Raoul; Patrick Mertens; Philippe Peruzzi; François Caire; Nadia Buisset; Romain David; Maarten Moens; Maxime Billot
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2022-09-22       Impact factor: 4.964

3.  Comparison of Spinal Cord Stimulation vs. Dorsal Root Ganglion Stimulation vs. Association of Both in Patients with Refractory Chronic Back and/or Lower Limb Neuropathic Pain: An International, Prospective, Randomized, Double-Blinded, Crossover Trial (BOOST-DRG Study).

Authors:  Philippe Rigoard; Manuel Roulaud; Lisa Goudman; Nihel Adjali; Amine Ounajim; Jimmy Voirin; Christophe Perruchoud; Bénédicte Bouche; Philippe Page; Rémy Guillevin; Mathieu Naudin; Martin Simoneau; Bertille Lorgeoux; Sandrine Baron; Kevin Nivole; Mathilde Many; Iona Maitre; Raphaël Rigoard; Romain David; Maarten Moens; Maxime Billot
Journal:  Medicina (Kaunas)       Date:  2021-12-21       Impact factor: 2.430

  3 in total

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