| Literature DB >> 29507873 |
Matthieu Komorowski1,2,3, Sarah Fleming4, Mala Mawkin1, Jochen Hinkelbein5.
Abstract
Future space exploration missions will take humans far beyond low Earth orbit and require complete crew autonomy. The ability to provide anaesthesia will be important given the expected risk of severe medical events requiring surgery. Knowledge and experience of such procedures during space missions is currently extremely limited. Austere and isolated environments (such as polar bases or submarines) have been used extensively as test beds for spaceflight to probe hazards, train crews, develop clinical protocols and countermeasures for prospective space missions. We have conducted a literature review on anaesthesia in austere environments relevant to distant space missions. In each setting, we assessed how the problems related to the provision of anaesthesia (e.g., medical kit and skills) are dealt with or prepared for. We analysed how these factors could be applied to the unique environment of a space exploration mission. The delivery of anaesthesia will be complicated by many factors including space-induced physiological changes and limitations in skills and equipment. The basic principles of a safe anaesthesia in an austere environment (appropriate training, presence of minimal safety and monitoring equipment, etc.) can be extended to the context of a space exploration mission. Skills redundancy is an important safety factor, and basic competency in anaesthesia should be part of the skillset of several crewmembers. The literature suggests that safe and effective anaesthesia could be achieved by a physician during future space exploration missions. In a life-or-limb situation, non-physicians may be able to conduct anaesthetic procedures, including simplified general anaesthesia.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29507873 PMCID: PMC5824960 DOI: 10.1038/s41526-018-0039-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Microgravity ISSN: 2373-8065 Impact factor: 4.415
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of publications reporting on anaesthesia in austere environments relevant to a future space exploration mission, published from January 2000 to December 2016
Summary of the characteristics and limitations of the selected analogue environments
| LEO | LMIC/humanitarian | Combat | ICE | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Description | Use of LEO as analogue for interplanetary travel research | Resource-poor setting with lack of equipment and medical expertise | Out of hospital austere setting, high prevalence of severe trauma and blast injuries | Expeditions in environments such as: mountain, high altitude, polar, jungle, desert |
| Volume of surgical proceduresa | Nil | High | High | Low |
| Technological and equipment constraints | ++ | +++ | ++ | ++ |
| Human constraints | ++ | +++ | ++ | ++ |
| Patient physiological alterations | ++ secondary to exposure to microgravity | ± | Soldiers are healthy individuals before injury | ± (possible hypoxia, hypo/hyperthermia) |
| Limitations for applicability to SEM | No experience of surgery or anaesthesia. Lacks total isolation (option to evacuate, real-time telemedicine) | Does not provide microgravity and/or radiation exposures. Anaesthesia providers very different from astronaut population | Does not provide microgravity and/or radiation exposures. Pathology nearly exclusively traumatic. Well trained providers | Does not provide microgravity and/or radiation exposures |
LEO low earth orbit, LMIC low and middle income country, ICE isolated and confined environment
+: present; ++: important; +++: major
askill erosion is not expected in environments with a high caseload
List of expected surgical conditions, recommended procedures and medical illnesses during SEM, not including pregnancy-related conditions
| 1- Surgical conditions and procedures | 2-Non-surgical conditions |
| 1.1- Trauma | 2.1- General medical conditions |
| Suturing laceration | Minor trauma, sprains and strains |
| 1.2- General surgical | 2.2- Space-specific conditions |
| Drainage of superficial abscess | Cardiovascular deconditioning, orthostatic intolerance |
Adapted from.[13,32,50,51,57]
Fig. 2Fluid shift in space, and its involvement in post-flight orthostatic intolerance. Immediately after entering weightlessness, a portion of the blood volume shifts towards the upper body, leading to the 'puffy face' and 'chicken legs' syndrome. Post-flight, the combination of hypovolaemia and hypo-reactivity of the cardiovascular system commonly leads to orthostatic hypotension. Reproduced with permission from Gunga[71]
Summary of findings and recommendations
| 1. The equipment, protocols and training programme for anaesthesia need to be developed and designed alongside all related medical sub-specialties, in particular surgery. |
| 2. The basic principles of safe surgery (safety checklist, prevention of surgical site infection, confirmation of site and procedure, etc.) must be guaranteed. Checklists should be provided for all the essential steps, including general surgical safety (following the WHO model), preoperative assessment and anaesthetic procedures. |
| 3. The personnel in charge of delivering anaesthesia require specific training. |
| 4. Skills redundancy will be an important safety parameter. Several crewmembers must be trained to achieve at least a basic level of competency (similar to WHO level 1). |
| 5. Most expected conditions requiring anaesthesia are traumatic and infectious. The availability of blood products or substitutes is expected to improve the survivability of severe bleeding. |
| 6. Non-anaesthetists can perform anaesthesia. Physicians are preferred, but as a last resort (life-or-limb situation), non-physicians could attempt to perform advanced medical care including surgery and anaesthesia. |
| 7. A restricted set of equipment can be sufficient. The strict minimum set of required equipment for anaesthesia is small, but caring for a surgical patient requires extensive equipment and consumables that spans well beyond. |
| 8. The number of available anaesthesia protocols should be minimised, and efforts should be made to simplify them. |
| 9. Ketamine appears to be the most suitable intravenous anaesthetic agent for general anaesthesia and procedural sedation. Videolaryngoscopes could be the preferred equipment for endotracheal intubation. |
| 10. Regional anaesthesia is an appealing option for limb surgery. A limited number of blocks are sufficient. Ultrasound guidance accelerates training and improves success rate. |
List of questions used in the literature review
| Category | Questions |
|---|---|
| Usefulness of analogues | 1. What characteristics of each selected austere environment are relevant to a SEM? |
| Expected conditions | 2. What medical and surgical conditions are encountered in austere environments and expected during a SEM? |
| 3. What factors contribute to patient death in austere environments and a SEM? | |
| Medical skills | 4. What is the profile and medical skills of anaesthesia providers in austere environments? What medical skills are recommended for a SEM? |
| 5. What non-clinical skills are important for healthcare delivery in austere environments? How can human behaviour and performance be optimised? | |
| Medical kits | 6. What equipment is necessary or optional for anaesthesia in austere environments and during a SEM? |
| 7. How is telemedicine used for healthcare in remote environments? How could it be used during future SEM? | |
| Pre, per and postoperative management | 8. How is the patient assessed and resuscitated before receiving an anaesthetic procedure? What are the specificities of the physiology of the microgravity-exposed patient? |
| 9. How is general anaesthesia administered in austere environments? How is the airway managed? | |
| 10. What is the role of regional and perimedullar anaesthesia in austere environments? What blocks are recommended? | |
| 11. What considerations are important for choosing the most appropriate anaesthetic technique in austere environments? | |
| 12. How is the patient managed in the post-operative period in austere environments? What are the guidelines for pain control? |
They explore various aspects of anaesthesia in austere environments and during a future SEM, and correspond to potential current gaps in space medicine knowledge and/or technology. Refer to text for explanations on how the list was established.