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- Attending Physician
What position are your surgeons using, beachchair or lateral?
Do they pester you about BP?
Whats your limit?
Where do you measure BP?
What are the risks?
Thought this was a good topic we haven't discussed. Pretty basic for many but we'll see.
Don't tell me that you actually think that this type of consent has any value.lateral...
we lower the BP until they can see...no point going to the OR if surgery can't be performed.
we monitor bp in the non-operative arm
we consent ALL the patients for possible death and/or severe disability...
Don't tell me that you actually think that this type of consent has any value.
Do all you guys give your shoulder scopes an interscalene block as well? We do them for every single shoulder, and at times I wonder if it's more for max resident benefit than anything else.
Do all you guys give your shoulder scopes an interscalene block as well? We do them for every single shoulder, and at times I wonder if it's more for max resident benefit than anything else.
The BIBLE on bp management and treatment is JNCVII....no where in this 50+page document does it say anything about measuring the BP at the "noggin".
He is misleading you.I'm not telling you this....My HIGH-PRICED (ie make more $$ than you or me) lawyer is telling you this.
Where do you measure BP for sitting crani?
The BIBLE on bp management and treatment is JNCVII....no where in this 50+page document does it say anything about measuring the BP at the "noggin".
You mean Anesthesiologists who are not MMD?the same place where it says to do so in JNCVII.
Anesthesioloigsts...in general...has no clue about bp management.
He is misleading you.
This type of consent is worthless when you are doing something like induced hypotension and you cause some type of disaster.
Ask any lawyer who is not "highly priced your lawyer".
No they don't.They discuss cerebral perfusion autoregulation in hypertensive patients with PVD who need shoulder surgery in the sitting position?
You mean Anesthesiologists who are not MMD?
No they don't.
He is just trying to make everybody know that he reads this stuff.
They discuss cerebral perfusion autoregulation in hypertensive patients with PVD who need shoulder surgery in the sitting position under GA?
No, you are Napoleon.I don't consider myself an "anesthesiologist"
No, you are Napoleon.
When you read these articles....and as you track the refereces...which I know you all do....
it all leads back to bp managment...which ultimately all comes from the Framingham Study....
I won't say more....the library is free to everyone.
Wait, you're using Framingham-based studies to guide how you routinely do BP monitoring in the OR? I'm not sure you can compare monitoring Framingham's patient population, studied over a 30 year stretch, to monitoring patients with hyper-acute BP changes in the OR... or am I missing something in your logic? 😕
I have only one thing to say.....
read the articles....track the references......see where they lead.....it's a long trail....
Once you do your homework...you may be quite surprised.
Is there any benefit for measuring BP at the head in an old guy with PVD under GA?
How low do you run the BP? Do you have a cut off? Does it depend on the patient? A time length for maintaining relative hypotension (a quite ambiguous term in itself).
Calling you Napoleon is not "name calling", he was a great Military leader like yourself he just had a slightly over inflated ego.let it be known who started with name-calling FIRST in this thread.
Point noted home boy
BTW, I'm not trying to be antagonistic. I think this stuff could very well be asked on orals and I'm just trying to follow their line of questioning on this board. Its helped before, can't see how it could hurt now.
I have to agree with you on this one.I think I would fail the oral boards if I answered things there the way I discuss things here.
I can't believe that you feel so ashamed of your training that you are trying to deny it.I don't consider myself an "anesthesiologist"
What position are your surgeons using, beachchair or lateral?
Do they pester you about BP?
Whats your limit?
Where do you measure BP?
What are the risks?
Thought this was a good topic we haven't discussed. Pretty basic for many but we'll see.
Great article a few months ago in the APSF newsletter about monitoring the BP via a-line at the level of the eardrum, especially if in beach chair position. There have been cases of catastrophic neurologic injury secondary to inadequate brain perfusion because of lowered BP and subsequent CBF. Probably putting patients at risk more often than we realize...
http://www.apsf.org/resource_center/newsletter/2007/summer/01_beach_chair.htm
-copro
OK,Can we return to Noyac's original post?
We stopped doing induced hypotension for any surgery several years ago and I can say that we are lucky that our surgeons undrstand and don't insist on it.Most of ours use the beachchair arrangement of some sort - IMHO, the absolute most dangerous of any position we use - totally unstable, high center of gravity, restricted chest movement from the damn straps, surgeons pulling so hard they actually pull the patients head out of the headrest they have been secured to, and just a royal pain in the *** overall. I'm just waiting for one of the larger patients to hit the floor someday. I love the few talented ortho surgeons we have left that can very easily do all these types of cases in a lateral position.
Due to ongoing concerns about hypotensive anesthesia in general, and particularly after the recent APSF article, we have pretty much abandoned hypotensive techniques. Too much potential risks on spines (POVL in particular), ditto for the shoulders, and not really that much benefit to the surgeons. I'm really surprised most of you don't seem to be concerned about the APSF article - it put the fear of God in many of us as well as our surgeons. We seem to see a lot of older patients having shoulder surgery, so our tolerance for hypotension is already pretty low.
I know I've started calculating a correction (not on the anesthesia record) to give me a better idea of where my BP truly is. The correction is 0.77mmHg for each CM of gradient, or about 2mmHg per inch.
Again, I apologize and will not respond anymore if that is what you guys want.
What position are your surgeons using, beachchair or lateral?
Do they pester you about BP? Not too much for scopes
Whats your limit?
Where do you measure BP?
What are the risks?
Thought this was a good topic we haven't discussed. Pretty basic for many but we'll see.
That would be nice.
I gotta say Military, you are getting old. And now you are criticizing the very profession that makes up this forum, that all of us are a part of. If you have someplace better to be with people who understand these principles better than we do then do us all a favor and go there. Personally, I doubt many others understand this stuff as well as we do and that is probably why you are here. But your incessant badgering is so f*cking predictable its not even worth reading your posts. You are ruining good threads daily.
Could you do us all a favor participate in a cordial manner? If not then take a hike.
You can attempt to insult me now like everyone else that disagrees with your pov but I will not respond. Good day.
1)Chair.
2)yes for scope cases.
3) 20% less than map if BP well controlled pre-op. Try to minimize bp lower than that (a couple of min's at a time), but the surgery has gotta happen.
4) We use the old BP cuff. I know you gotta measure the level of the noggin. But that just don't happen w/o the a-line. I can subtract, mentally, some sort of semi-ambiguous amount of pressure from the systolic with the cuff to approximate cerebral systolic pressure.
4) Rarely discuss much more than nerve damage/airway issues.
Do you know where that number came from? Where's the reference?
I can't find it.
That's certainly not what we do in the CV rooms.
I spoke to Dr. Ken Tuman directly about that issue. Something about staying safely on the autoregulation curve.
My father had shoulder surgery a few years back, and requested regional so he could watch. It was converted to general after pain control was inadequate.
Based on the comments above ("Do you do interscalene blocks for post op pain) I would guess that regional shoulders are not commonly done. Have any of you ever done one?