| Literature DB >> 34273966 |
Michael A Pritchett1, Kelvin Lau2, Scott Skibo3, Karen A Phillips4, Krish Bhadra5.
Abstract
Partnership between anesthesia providers and proceduralists is essential to ensure patient safety and optimize outcomes. A renewed importance of this axiom has emerged in advanced bronchoscopy and interventional pulmonology. While anesthesia-induced atelectasis is common, it is not typically clinically significant. Advanced guided bronchoscopic biopsy is an exception in which anesthesia protocols substantially impact outcomes. Procedure success depends on careful ventilation to avoid excessive motion, reduce distortion causing computed tomography (CT)-to-body-divergence, stabilize dependent areas, and optimize breath-hold maneuvers to prevent atelectasis. Herein are anesthesia recommendations during guided bronchoscopy. An FiO2 of 0.6 to 0.8 is recommended for pre-oxygenation, maintained at the lowest tolerable level for the entire the procedure. Expeditious intubation (not rapid-sequence) with a larger endotracheal tube and non-depolarizing muscle relaxants are preferred. Positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) of up to 10-12 cm H2O and increased tidal volumes help to maintain optimal lung inflation, if tolerated by the patient as determined during recruitment. A breath-hold is required to reduce motion artifact during intraprocedural imaging (e.g., cone-beam CT, digital tomosynthesis), timed at the end of a normal tidal breath (peak inspiration) and held until pressures equilibrate and the imaging cycle is complete. Use of the adjustable pressure-limiting valve is critical to maintain the desired PEEP and reduce movement during breath-hold maneuvers. These measures will reduce atelectasis and CT-to-body divergence, minimize motion artifact, and provide clearer, more accurate images during guided bronchoscopy. Following these recommendations will facilitate a successful lung biopsy, potentially accelerating the time to treatment by avoiding additional biopsies. Application of these methods should be at the discretion of the anesthesiologist and the proceduralist; best medical judgement should be used in all cases to ensure the safety of the patient.Entities:
Keywords: Atelectasis; Computed tomography; Divergence; Electromagnetic navigation bronchoscopy; General anesthesia; Image-guided bronchoscopy; Lung cancer; Radial endobronchial ultrasound
Year: 2021 PMID: 34273966 PMCID: PMC8286573 DOI: 10.1186/s12890-021-01584-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pulm Med ISSN: 1471-2466 Impact factor: 3.317
Fig. 1A–C Computed tomography (CT) and cone-beam CT (CBCT) scans during image-guided bronchoscopy without an optimized ventilation protocol. Significant atelectasis and ghosting artifact were observed. D–F CT and CBCT scans from a different patient using a ventilation protocol designed to prevent atelectasis
Anesthesia for advanced guided bronchoscopy
| Step | Considerations | Recommendations | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Preprocedure | Recruit lung volume, assess tolerance to higher PEEP, and prevent atelectasis | Perform incentive spirometry |
| 2 | Preoxygenation | Avoid absorption atelectasis | Modest FiO2 (0.6 to 0.8) as tolerated |
| 3 | Anesthesia type | Need for a completely motionless patient | TIVA with propofol and muscle paralysis |
| 4 | Intubation | Enable gas passage past the bronchoscope with the least increase in circuit pressure | Use a larger endotracheal tube (usually ≥ 8.5, but as guided by patient anatomy) |
| Minimize atelectasis by avoiding traditional rapid-sequence intubation (i.e., avoid FiO2 of 1.0 and Suxamethonium) | Perform an expeditious intubation using non-depolarizing muscle relaxants | ||
| 5 | Post-intubation | Reverse any induction-related atelectasis and assess hemodynamic stability during higher PEEP | Conduct up to 4 recruitment maneuvers as tolerated |
| Maintain FiO2 at the lowest tolerable level | |||
| Maintain optimal lung inflation | PEEP of up to 10–12 cm H2O for upper lobe biopsies, consider higher PEEP for lower lobe lesions or obese patients | ||
| An increase in tidal volumes may be considered | |||
| 6 | Breath-hold: timing | Reduce motion artifact | Breath-hold at peak inspiration (end of a normal tidal breath) |
| Breath-hold: pressure | Maintain a constant circuit pressure and PEEP and reduce diaphragmatic movement | Manually adjust APL valve to maintain circuit pressure at desired PEEP level | |
| Breath-hold: duration | To minimize lung movement during imaging, allow time for pressure to equilibrate | Maintain breath-hold for 5–10 s before beginning imaging sweep | |
| 7 | Biopsy | Ensure consistent settings between imaging and biopsy | Maintain settings at the same levels as Step 6 |
| 8 | Post-procedure | Exclude pneumothorax and assess any residual atelectasis | Routine reversal and post-procedure methods. Perform chest X-ray |
APL adjustable pressure-limiting valve, FiO fraction of inspired oxygen, PEEP positive end-expiratory pressure, TIVA total intravenous anesthesia
Fig. 2Recruitment maneuvers after intubation may reverse any induction-related atelectasis and assess hemodynamic stability during higher PEEP. Hemodynamic instability may limit use of the traditional ‘40 for 40’ hold. Higher PEEP for shorter duration may be considered
Fig. 3Mechanisms leading to atelectasis during bronchoscopy and increased airway resistance. A Surface tension caused by water molecules leads to attraction. B Once the airflow is disrupted in atelectatic lung units, turbulent airflow leads to increased airway resistance. C As the bronchi decrease in diameter, there is a substantial increase in airways resistance. D Compliance curve for alveoli. As the lung deflates, resistance increases and gas flow through the airways decreases. Atelectatic lung units have poor compliance and require significant changes in inflation pressure to result in minor changes in volume
Fig. 4A breath-hold is required to reduce motion artifact during intraprocedural imaging (e.g., CBCT, digital tomosynthesis). The breath-hold should be performed at peak inspiration, not at end-expiration. This does not require a vital capacity maneuver but should occur at the end of a normal tidal breath. Adapted from Kapwatt at English Wikipedia (https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=74891988) and used with permission under the terms of Creative Commons License CC BY-SA 3.0 ()
Fig. 5To prevent motion artifact, maintain the breath-hold until pressures plateau before beginning the imaging sweep (5–10 s). Be aware of the potential for hemodynamic changes due to prolonged breath-hold