RESUMO
BACKGROUND: In general anaesthesia practice a fresh gas flow (FGF) of ≥0.5 L/min is usually applied. Automated gas delivery devices are developed to reduce volatile anaesthetic consumption by limiting gas flow. This study aimed to compare desflurane consumption between automated gas control devices compared to conventional low flow anaesthesia in the Flow-I and Aisys anaesthesia machines, and to compare desflurane consumption between the two automated gas delivery devices. We hypothesised that desflurane consumption would be lower with automated gas delivery compared to conventional low flow anaesthesia, and that desflurane consumption could differ between the different gas delivery devices. METHODS: We allocated 160 patients undergoing robot-assisted laparoscopic surgery into four groups, Flow-I with automated gas control, Flow-i with conventional low-flow (1 L/min), Aisys with end tidal gas control and Aisys with conventional low flow. Patients were maintained at minimum alveolar concentration (MAC) 0.7-0.8. Desflurane consumption was recorded after 9, 30 and 60 minutes of anaesthesia. RESULTS: After 60 minutes, compared to conventional low flow anaesthesia, automated gas delivery systems reduced desflurane consumption from 25.8 to 15.2 mL for the Aisys machine (P < .001) and from 22.1 to 16.8 mL for the Flow-I (P < .001). Time to MAC 0.7 and stable FGF was shorter with Aisys endtidal control compared to Flow-I automated gas control. CONCLUSION: Under clinical conditions, we found a reduction in desflurane consumption when using automated gas delivery devices compared to conventional low flow anaesthesia. Both devices were reliable in use.
Assuntos
Anestesiologia , Anestésicos Inalatórios , Isoflurano , Anestesia Geral , Anestesia por Inalação , Desflurano , HumanosRESUMO
A 20-year-old woman presented with dyspnoea in the Emergency department and subsequently suffered a cardiac arrest. The initial rhythm was PEA (pulseless electrical activity). She had intermittent return of spontaneous circulation. Transthoracic echocardiography showed a dilated hypokinetic right ventricle and a collapsed left ventricle. The tentative diagnosis was pulmonary embolism, but she remained hemodynamically unstable despite thrombolysis. 90 min after the collapse she was put on cardiopulmonary bypass and surgical embolectomy was performed. Large masses of thrombotic material were collected from central parts of the right and left pulmonary artery. Therapeutic hypothermia was applied for 24 hours postoperatively. The remaining hospital stay was uneventful and ten days after the presentation she was transferred to her local hospital. At this point she was without neurological sequelae. The patient had used oral contraceptives (ethinyl estradiol/ drospirenone).