I am in my first year of anaesthesia training in Ireland. Quick question that I thought had a straightforward answer, but different bosses keep telling me different things:
Can a patient having a GA without a neuromuscular blocker have awareness intra-operatively?
Example: a young healthy woman having a wrist operation with an LMA, an etSev of 1.8 (ie less than 1MAC), standard induction with fentanyl and propofol and a bit of morphine pre-incision. Breathing spontaneously RR 14, no hypertension/tachycardia.
Can someone like this be aware? My understanding was that long before someone like this becomes aware, they will laryngospasm or start moving.
Cheers,
D
Awareness can happen in any case that goes south. B.P in the toilet and pressors not giving you the rise you are looking for? Volatile is one of the first things that gets dialed down and in extreme cases turned off +/- IV scopolamine.
How likely is awareness when the B.P. is in the 40-50's (decreased CBF)? Not likely with residual anesthetics on board, but very possible. Cardiac, Trauma and OB are notorious for recall regardless of weather you use NMB or not.
"Awareness" in the eye of the patient may mean waking up with an ETT in the trachea as they emerge through the stages of anesthesia. This is not what I call being "aware" during a case. It's just waking up from anesthesia. It's a normal continuum of an anesthetic if you are not a fan of deep extubations. Most people don't remember this phase but that is not to say all.... and these patients may perceive their experience as a case with awareness under anesthesia.
MAC awake is generally 1/3 of MAC, but for nitrous its about 2/3 of MAC. Ive never had anybody have recall during any of my cases... and I'm one of those people who runs .5 MAC routinely, especially if I have a paralyzed patient with an ETT (balanced anesthetic technique with other meds on board). If they get light, I will pick it up with vitals not a patient moving. Excluding some valvular patients, a HR in the mid 40-60s and nml B.P. + .5 MAC is all good in the hood IMO.
I know that Ireland anesthesiologists may be a bit different with their average MAC's for a case (at least at the hospital where I was at... and other RCSI med students rotated through). I remember hearing people say that americans using .5 MAC are looking for trouble and saw 1.4 MAC being utilized often. This was many years ago. It may be a culture thing that has changed or only present at the hospital I worked at.
Loved the scone and tea breaks...and the billion holidays... and the 9:00 theatre times... and the induction rooms....but whats up with the milk in the tea and black/red pudding?
😉
As my Irish anesthesia mentor used to say....
Go raibh maith agatand and all the best,
Sevo
