| Literature DB >> 32689935 |
Frank Fideler1, Michael Walker2, Christian Grasshoff3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intraoperative blood pressure is a relevant variable for postoperative outcome in infants undergoing surgical procedures. It is therefore important to know whether the type of anesthesia has an impact on intraoperative blood pressure management in very low birth weight infants. Here, we retrospectively analyzed intraoperative blood pressure in very low birthweight infants receiving either awake caudal anesthesia without sedation, or caudal block in combination with general anesthesia, both for open inguinal hernia repair.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32689935 PMCID: PMC7370478 DOI: 10.1186/s12871-020-01094-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Anesthesiol ISSN: 1471-2253 Impact factor: 2.217
Baseline characteristics of very low birthweight infants receiving open inguinal hernia repair. Sixteen patients (11 boys, 5 girls) received a caudal anesthesia as a stand-alone method, 26 patients (22 boys, 4 girls) a combination of a general anesthesia with a caudal anesthesia. The baseline characteristics are well balanced between both groups (Mann-Whitney-U test)
| GA + CA ( | CA ( | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median | 25–75% percentile | Min - Max | Median | 25–75% percentile | Min - Max | ||
| birthweight [g] | 1390 | 778–1850 | 560–2450 | 1220 | 869–1593 | 570–2150 | 0.32 |
| PMA at birth [weeks] | 31.57 | 29.68–34.07 | 25.57–38.86 | 30.07 | 27.00–32.72 | 24.29–34.29 | 0.11 |
| Weight at OR [g] | 2990 | 2375–3400 | 2000–3600 | 2400 | 2149–3050 | 2000–3600 | 0.05 |
| PMA at OR [weeks] | 39.79 | 36.86–41.61 | 35.14–48.29 | 37.79 | 36.40–39.71 | 35.43–43.71 | 0.11 |
| Duration of surgery [min] | 25.5 | 19.5–49.0 | 14.0–66.0 | 29.5 | 19.75–40.0 | 8.0–66.0 | 0.9 |
PMA Post menstrual age, OR Operation
Fig. 1Ultrasound images of the implementation of caudal anaesthesia in very low birth weight infants scheduled for open inguinal hernia repair. Caudal anaesthesia was implemented in infants placed in a lateral decubitus position with the left side down. Correct needle placement and distribution of the local anaesthetic was observed in all patients as visible on the ultrasound image and led to a surgically sufficient analgesia. Both pictures show a long axis view of the spinal canal. a Puncture with an Epican®Paed25G was performed in an in-plane technique by means of a SonoSite® M-Turbo with linear probe (5–13 MHz). b The ultrasound picture in in-plane technique demonstrates the spread of the local anaesthetic (ropivacaine 0.375%; 1 ml/kg)
Fig. 2Time course of the median sevoflurane concentration (median ± interquartile range) calculated from patients in the group of combined general- and caudal anesthesia. The time point “0 min” indicates the start of the surgical procedure and is marked by the vertical red line. The dashed blue line indicates a sevoflurane concentration of 3.0 vol% corresponding to 1 MAC. The blue line represents the median sevoflurane concentration of 1.3 vol% during the maintenance phase of general anesthesia
The table summarizes the doses and ranges of anesthetic agents used in the group of combined general- and caudal anesthesia
| Anesthetic agent | i.v. Induction (n) | Mask Induction (n) | maintenance of anesthesia (n) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Propofol [mg/kg] | 2–4 (11) | – | – |
| Sevofluran [vol%] | – | 0.6–7.3 (15) | 0.5–2.9 [mean 1.3] (26) |
| Remifentanil [μg/kg/min] | – | – | 0.1–0.3 (13) |
| Vecuronium [mg/kg] | 0.1 (4) | – | – |
Fig. 3The graph depicts the individual courses of mean arterial blood pressure in very low birth weight infants during open inguinal hernia repair. Each character represents a single patient. The surgical procedure started at the time point 0 min. For easier interpretation of the data a blue line was drawn at 35 mmHg, since this value marked the threshold that was defined to be safe according to Rhondali et al. [8] a The graph visualizes that in the group of combined general- and caudal anesthesia approximately half of the mean blood pressure values measured during inguinal hernia repair were below the critical threshold of 35 mmHg. b In contrast to the patients in the group of combined general- and caudal anesthesia only 3% of all mean blood pressure values measured in the caudal anesthesia group underran the critical margin of 35 mmHg
Fig. 4Evaluation of potentially critical episodes (mean arterial blood pressure values below 35 mmHg) in both groups of very low birth weight infants receiving open inguinal hernia repair. a The figure demonstrates that the extent to which the critical limit of 35 mmHg was underran is significantly greater in the group of combined general- and caudal anesthesia (GA + CA) (**; P < 0.01). b Analysis of the mean cumulative time per patient with a mean arterial pressure value below 35 mmHg. Patients in the group of combined general- and caudal anesthesia (GA + CA) spent significantly longer time with mean arterial pressure below 35 mmHg compared to patients in the caudal anesthesia (CA) group (***; P < 0.001)
depicts intraoperative interventions to raise blood pressure in very low birthweight children receiving open inguinal hernia repair. Full electrolyte solution boli (Jonosteril®) or vasopressor boli (Akrinor®; cafedrine/theoadrenaline) were administered at the discretion of the anaesthesiologist (Mann-Whitney-U test)
| GA + CA (n = 26) | CA ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fluid bolus | Patients n [%] | 15 [57.7] | 3 [18.8] | 0.0046 |
| Average fluid bolus [ml/patient] [mean] | 27 ± 14.8 | 10 ± 4.1 | 0.0015 | |
| Cafedrine / theoadrenaline | Patients n [%] | 5 [19.2] | 0 [0] | < 0.001 |
| Average vasopressor bolus [ml/patient] [mean] | 0.15 ± 0.06 | 0 | < 0.001 |