-
6Overview:
-
General preoperative medication
objectives for the ambulatory surgical setting are similar to
those for inpatient management with respect to the following
goals:
-
Anxiety control
-
Management of postoperative
pain
-
Control/management of
nausea and vomiting
-
Attenuate aspiration risk
during anesthesia induction
-
For same-day surgery attention
must be paid to the choice of preanesthetic drugs such that
rapid recovery is not significantly hindered
-
Typically, conventional
preanesthetic medications do not influence discharge
times.
-
For instance, prior to induction the combination
of 0.04 mg/kg midazolam (Versed) with 1 ug/kg fentanyl (Sublimaze)
resulted in a reduction in anesthesia maintenance requirements
{desflurane (Suprane)}, reduced airway irritability, and
reduced blood pressure increases during induction.
-
6Anxiety
control:
-
The extent to which patients
may benefit from anxiolytic medication is strongly influenced
by the presurgical degree of anxiety experienced by the
patient.
-
Increased anxiety has been
noted in females and other factors that may increase stress
include:
-
the procedure itself-for
instance a "mutilating" surgery
-
cancer surgery
-
the patient accompanied
into the holding area by a relative or friend
-
a first surgery
-
patients who have had a bad
experience associated with a previous surgery
-
If the anesthesia provider it
is uncertain about the level of patient anxiety, a direct and
reasonable way to gain information is to simply ask the
patient
-
7Needing to
remove dentures before surgery has also been associated with
increased risk.
-
Many patients may be embarrassed because
they wear dentures an even cover their mouths with a blanket
as they enter the operating room because of this
embarrassment.
-
Often, it is reasonable to allow the patient to
leave their false teeth in place thereby reducing anxiety and
exhibiting sensitivity to the patient.
-
With contemporary
anesthesia approaches it is highly unlikely that a patient
will "aspirate" their dentures. Should dentures
become dislodged during intubation, they can be simply
removed, recognizing that at this point the patient is
unconscious.
-
The reason why anxiety control
is so important physiologically is that increased anxiety is
likely associated with increasing circulating catecholamines
which in turn may promote elevated blood pressures and other
unwarranted and unnecessary adverse cardiovascular conditions.
-
For management of children,
special sensitivity needs to be exhibited to ensure reduced
separation anxiety from parents.
-
Premedication may not be needed
if the presurgical environment is characterized by calm
parents who facilitate transfer of the child to a " warm
and playful" anesthesia provider. Partial sedation,
although effective, may result in prolonged recovery.
-
The most commonly used current
preanesthetic medications for production of sedation are the
benzodiazepines.
-
6Benzodiazepines:
-
Midazolam (Versed):
The most commonly used
preoperative benzodiazepines is midazolam (Versed), a
water-soluble agent with an initial distribution half-life of
about seven minutes an elimination half-life of about 2.5
hours.
-
Metabolism:
-
Dosage adjustment with age for
midazolam (Versed) (IV administration): For example, to
obtain adequate sedation prior to upper gastrointestinal
endoscopy--
-
20 year-old patient --0.15
mg/kg (For a 20 year-old patient, 20-40 minutes of
sedation will be usually provided by a dose range of
0.07-0.15 mg/kg)
-
60 year-old patient -- 0.1
mg/kg
-
90 year-old patient -- 0.03
mg/kg
-
Adverse effects for midazolam
(Versed):
-
psychomotor depression
-
respiratory depression
-
cardiovascular depression
-
6Use
of midazolam (Versed) and children:
-
Oral midazolam (Versed) is
available and at a dose of 0.5 mg/kg sedation and
anxiolytic effects are produced.
-
Pre-treatment with
midazolam (Versed) prior to halothane (Fluothane)
administration for relatively short procedures (30
minutes) generally does not prolong the recovery
time.
-
However, when shorter-acting inhalational
agents are used, such as desflurane (Suprane) or
sevoflurane (Sevorane, Ultane) preceded by midazolam
(Versed) administration, a prolongation recovery may
occur.
-
Importantly, this length and recovery time
does not delay discharge from the hospital
-
Drug-drug interactions:
-
6Diazepam
(Valium):
-
By oral administration,
diazepam (Valium) is appropriate for managing anxiety in
patients scheduled for ambulatory surgery. Plasma
levels peaked at about one-hour after dosing with notable
anxiolytic effects. Drug effects last several hours
-
Dosage & patients age:
-
There is about a 10%
decrease in the required dose for each decade of
patients age.
-
Elimination half lives
tend to be longer in older patients, partially
accounting for reduced dosing requirements; however,
at equal plasma concentrations, elderly patients
exhibit increased intrinsic drug sensitivity.
-
Dosage: A typical diazepam
(Valium) dose would be about 2-5 mg/70 kg adult. In
the case of diazepam (Valium), active metabolites are
noted (desmethyl metabolites) such that the
pharmacological effect extends beyond the half-life of the
parent compound.
-
6Hemodynamic
effects and benzodiazepines:
-
With appropriate dosing,
midazolam (Versed) is comparable to diazepam (Valium) in
terms of relatively minor cardiovascular/respiratory
effects. Here again, however age plays a role.
-
Whereas a small
blood-pressure reduction (10%) would be observed in
the healthy patient, and elderly patient might
experience hypotensive reaction of 20%-35%, especially
in the presence of heart disease.
-
The present of other
drugs in a patient's system can add to the hypotensive
effects observed with benzodiazepines [coadministration
of thiopental (Pentothal), fentanyl (Sublimaze) or
propofol (Diprivan) along with a benzodiazepine could
cause greater respiratory and hemodynamic depressive
effects].
-
For midazolam (Versed),
given by IV administration, a decrease in oxygen
saturation may be observed during endoscopy.
-
Generally
administration of supplemental oxygen is appropriate
when benzodiazepines are administered
intravenously.
-
This precaution applies
not only to midazolam (Versed) used in premedication
but also when used alone or with other agents for
conscious sedation.
-
Fatigue & amnesia and
benzodiazepines
-
Benzodiazepines may cause
fatigue which could delay patient same-day discharge.
-
Usually, if the patient is
not discharged on the same day as the procedure, the
reason has to do with the procedure itself or with
anesthesia-induced nausea as opposed to fatigue or
somnolence.
-
Benzodiazepines,
particularly midazolam (Versed), is associated with
anterograde amnesia, that is amnesia concerning events
following benzodiazepine administration.
References:
-
1Preoperative Medication in
Basis of Anesthesia, 4th Edition, Stoelting, R.K. and Miller, R.,
p 119- 130, 2000)
-
Hobbs, W.R, Rall, T.W., and Verdoorn, T.A., Hypnotics and Sedatives;
Ethanol In, Goodman and Gillman's The Pharmacologial
Basis of Therapeutics, pp. 364-367 (Hardman, J.G, Limbird, L.E, Molinoff, P.B.,
Ruddon, R.W, and Gilman, A.G.,eds) The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.,
1996.
-
3Sno E. White The Preoperative
Visit and Premedication in Clinical Anesthesia Practice pp.
576-583 (Robert Kirby & Nikolaus Gravenstein, eds) W.B.
Saunders Co., Philadelphia, 1994
-
4John R. Moyers
and Carla M. Vincent Preoperative Medication in Clinical Anethesia,
4th edition, 551-565, (Paul G. Barash, Bruce. F. Cullen, Robert K. Stoelting,
eds) Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Philadelphia, PA, 2001
-
5Gertler, R.,
Brown, H. C, Mitchell, D.H and Silvius, E.N Dexmedetomidine (Precedex):
a novel sedative-analgesic agent, BUMC Proceedings 2001; 14:13-21
(http://www.baylorhealth.com/proceedings/14_1/14_1_gertler.htm)
-
6J. Lance Lichtor
Anesthesia for Ambulatory Surgery in Clinical Anethesia,
4th edition, 1217-the1238, (Paul G. Barash, Bruce. F. Cullen, Robert K. Stoelting,
eds) Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Philadelphia, PA, 2001
-
7J. S.
Gravenstein, and R. R. Kirby "General Anesthesia: Induction,
Maintenance, and Emergence" in Clinical Anesthesia Practice pp.
585-596 (Robert Kirby & Nikolaus Gravenstein, eds) W.B.
Saunders Co., Philadelphia, 1994
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