| Literature DB >> 31142954 |
Usama Iqbal1, Jeremy B Green2, Srikant Patel1, Yiru Tong3, Marcus Zebrower1, Alan D Kaye2, Richard D Urman4, Matthew R Eng2, Elyse M Cornett5, Henry Liu1.
Abstract
Enhanced recovery pathways are a novel approach focused on enhancing the care of surgical patients. "Prehabilitation" is the term applied to any intervention administered before surgery to reduce surgery-related morbidity, decrease the length of hospital stay, expedite the return of organ function, and facilitate the patient's return to normal life. A PubMed search was performed with the following key words: enhanced recovery, preoperative preparation, cessation of smoking and euvolemia. The results from this Pubmed search revealed that female patients may have higher levels of anxiety than male patients. Intensive smoking and alcohol cessation 6-8 weeks before elective surgery may reduce the incidence of postoperative morbidity. Preoperative exercise can be effective for reducing the postoperative complications like pulmonary complications and shortening the length of hospital stay. It is safe to allow patients to drink clear fluids up until 2 h before elective surgery (Level II evidence). Perioperative normoglycemia is the single most important factor to prevent surgical site infection. Intermittent pneumatic compression devices and low molecular weight heparin are effective in preventing postoperative thromboembolism. No advantage is gained by preoperative mechanical bowel preparation in elective colorectal surgery. The goal of preoperative fluid management is for the patient to arrive in the operating room in a hydrated and euvolemic state. Mild perioperative hypothermia may promote surgical wound infection by triggering thermoregulatory vasoconstriction, which decreases subcutaneous oxygen tension.Entities:
Keywords: Cessation of smoking; enhanced recovery; euvolemia; preoperative preparation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31142954 PMCID: PMC6515717 DOI: 10.4103/joacp.JOACP_54_18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Anaesthesiol Clin Pharmacol ISSN: 0970-9185
Types of prehabilitation interventions
| Physical activity | Educational | Nutritional | Psychological | Clinical |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strength training | Advice | Diet plans for weight loss | Anxiety reducing intervention | Optimizing medication |
| Aerobics | Guidance | Optimizing nutrition for malnourished | Any cognitive or behavior intervention | Diabetes/blood glucose control |
| Specific exercises to areas being operated on | Self-care strategies | Oral supplementation including micro and macro nutrients | Combined cognitive or behavioral | Treating anemia and interventions to obtain good baseline status |
Comparison between enhanced recovery protocols and conventional care protocol
| Preoperative period | |
|---|---|
| ERAS | Conventional |
| Give patient 100 g oral carbohydrate drink | No carbohydrate drink |
| Minimize starvation (stop solids 6 h and liquids 2 h before procedure) | Overnight starvation (8 h or more) |
| Do not utilize routine mechanical bowel preparation | Routine mechanical bowel preparation |
| Encourage exercise, decreased smoking, and decreased alcohol consumption | Parenteral hydration (overnight bowl preparation) |
| Obtain informed consent | |
| Provide information about the ERAS protocol | |
| Identify comorbidities | |
| Antibiotic administered preoperatively | |
| Neuraxial anesthesia plus general anesthesia | Spinal or general anesthesia only |
| Only when necessary: Nasogastric tubes, abdominal drains, and urinary catheters | Routine utilization of nasogastric tubes, abdominal drains, and urinary catheters |
| Goal-directed fluid therapy | Empirical/liberal hydration |
| Optimal oxygen maintenance | |
| minimal tissue handling | |
| Central and arterial lines should be used only if necessary | |
| Avoidance of hypothermia | |
| Early removal of tubes, drains, and catheters | Removal of tubes contingent on bowel motility |
| Early patient mobilization and enteral nutrition | No enforced patient mobilization and enteral nutrition only given when bowel motility is restored |
| Multimodal PONV prophylaxis | PONV prophylaxis |
| Day 2 removal of epidural catheter | |
| Maintenance of analgesia after epidural removal | |
| 30 days follow up should include | |
| 48 h phone call | Minimal follow up, usually limited to day 7 clinic visit or as needed |
| Clinic visit on 7th day | |
| Emergency room visits | |
ERAS=Enhanced recovery after surgery, PONV=Postoperative nausea and vomiting
Figure 1The pathway “re-engineered” – a model of process evolution in perioperative pathways. This re-engineered model is aimed at the timing of pre-assessment to much earlier in the pathway using simple online risk stratification tools, and also early staging by using objective physiological assessments. The purposes are to make sure that patients have detailed information prior to any medical decision and to operate with true collaborative decision-making to take center stage. Surgery school and any “bolt-ons” occur in conjunction with aims to have everything optimized prior to final decisions regarding surgery (Reproduced with permission from Springer Publisher)
Types of clinical outcomes
| Primary outcomes | Secondary outcomes |
|---|---|
| Postoperative infective complications (pneumonia, chest infection, and wound infection) | Length of stay in ICU or HDU |
| Postoperative noninfective complications (anastomotic leakage, wound dehiscence, or thromboembolism) | Perioperative morbidity (acute coronary event, stroke) |
| Length of hospital stay | Postoperative pain |
| All cause perioperative mortality | Hospital readmission |
ICU=Intensive care unit, HDU=High dependency unit
American Society of Anesthesiologists fasting recommendations
| Ingested material | Minimum fasting period |
|---|---|
| Clear liquid | 2 h |
| Breast milk | 4 h |
| Infant formula | 6 h |
| Nonhuman milk | 6 h |
| Light meal | 6 h |
| Fried food, fatty foods, or meat | 8 or more h |
Figure 2The stages of change model (Reproduced from Lauridsen et al. with permission)
Natural diurnal pattern of metabolism in humans
| Day | Night | |
|---|---|---|
| Hormones | Insulin positive | Insulin negative |
| Glucagon positive | ||
| Glucocorticoids positive | ||
| Substrates | Storage | Breakdown |
| Utilization | Carbohydrates | Fat |
Classifications of surgery and wound infection rate
| Classification | Description | Incidence of surgical site infection (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Class I clean | Uninfected including incisional surgery wound | <2 |
| Class II clean-contaminated | Elective operation of visceral organ | 5-15 |
| Class III contaminated | Open surgical wound with nonpurulent inflammation | 15-30 |
| Class IV dirty | Surgery involving old wounds with dead tissue or wounds that involve a perforated bowel or a preexisting clinical infection | >30 |
American Society of Anesthesiologists preoperative pharmacologic practice guidelines
| Agents | Preoperative Administration |
|---|---|
| Antacids (cimetidine, famotidine, ranitidine) | Antacids may be preoperatively administered to patients at increased risk of pulmonary aspiration Only administer nonparticulate antacids Do not routinely administer preoperative antacids to reduce the risk of pulmonary aspiration in patients with no apparent increased risk for pulmonary aspiration |
| Antiemetics (ondansetron) | Antiemetics may be preoperatively administered to patients at increased risk of PONV The consultants and ASA members both disagree that preoperative antiemetics should be routinely administered before elective procedures requiring general anesthesia, regional anesthesia, or procedural sedation |
| Anticholinergics (atropine, scopolamine) | The administration of preoperative anticholinergics to reduce the risk of pulmonary aspiration is not recommended |
| GIT stimulants (metoclopramide) | The routine administration of preoperative multiple agents is not recommended for patients with no apparent increased risk for pulmonary aspiration |
| Multiple agents (sodium citrate) | The routine administration of preoperative multiple agents is not recommended for patients with no increased risk for developing pulmonary aspiration |
Adopted from ASA guideline 2017. ASA=American Society of Anesthesiologists, PONV=Postoperative nausea and vomiting, GIT=Gastrointestinal tract