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Regional anesthesia for cardiac surgery

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Title: Regional anesthesia for cardiac surgery


1
Regional anesthesia for cardiac surgery
  • John Butterworth, MD
  • Professor Head
  • Section on Cardiothoracic Anesthesia
  • Wake Forest University School of Medicine
  • Winston-Salem, North Carolina

http//www.wfubmc.edu/anesthesia/ 
Select Education and then click on
Brazil
2
Items for Discussion
  • History of coronary surgery and epidural
    techniques
  • Thoracic epidural analgesia for cardiac surgery
  • Thoracic epidural anesthesia for cardiac surgery
  • Spinal anesthesia and analgesia for cardiac
    surgery
  • Are the risks small and the benefits large for
    regional techniques in cardiac surgery?
  • Summary

3
History of epidural anesthesia
  • 1885 J. L. Corning injects cocaine near spinal
    vessels probably epidural
  • 1901 Sicard and Cathelin popularize caudal
    anesthesia
  • 1921 Pages popularizes LEA
  • 1932-3 Gutierrez and Soresi use hanging drop
  • 1939 Forestier, Dogliotti describe loss of
    resistance
  • 1976 Hoar et al use epidural to control
    hypertension after CABG
  • 2000 Karagoz reports TEA for CABG

J. L. Corning
4
Items for Discussion
  • History of coronary surgery and epidural
    techniques
  • Thoracic epidural analgesia for cardiac surgery
  • Thoracic epidural anesthesia for cardiac surgery
  • Spinal anesthesia and analgesia for cardiac
    surgery
  • Are the risks small and the benefits large for
    regional techniques in cardiac surgery?
  • Summary

5
Potential advantages of thoracic epidural
analgesia for cardiac surgery
  • Reduction of neuroendocrine stress response
  • Effects on hemodynamics
  • Metabolism
  • Immune responses/SIRS
  • Adverse effects of opioids
  • Cardiac sympathectomy
  • Improved GI motility
  • Intense postoperative analgesia

Chaney. Ch 4 in Regional Anesthesia for Cardiac
Surgery, 2002 Liu, Carpenter, Neal.
Anesthesiology 1995821474-1506
6
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7
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8
Potential advantages of thoracic epidural
analgesia for cardiac surgery
  • Reduction of neuroendocrine stress response
  • Cardiac sympathectomy
  • Inhibit coronary vasoconstriction
  • Improves collateral flow during ischemia
  • Relief of angina in awake patients
  • Additional benefit above ß-blockers
  • Improved GI Motility
  • Intense postoperative analgesia

Chaney. Ch 4 in Regional Anesthesia for Cardiac
Surgery, 2002 Liu, Carpenter, Neal.
Anesthesiology 1995821474-1506
9
(No Transcript)
10
Potential advantages of thoracic epidural
analgesia for cardiac surgery
  • Reduction of neuroendocrine stress response
  • Cardiac sympathectomy
  • Improved GI Motility
  • Intense postoperative analgesia

Chaney. Ch 4 in Regional Anesthesia for Cardiac
Surgery, 2002 Liu, Carpenter, Neal.
Anesthesiology 1995821474-1506
11
Effects of epidural anesthesia on
gastrointestinal system
  • Inhibit nociceptive afferents
  • Inhibit sympathetic efferents
  • Increase blood flow to gut
  • Effects from systemic absorption of LAs?
  • After surgery (with continued LA dosing)
  • Reduced postoperative opiates
  • Increased peristalsis
  • Better appetite
  • Shorter length of stay after intestinal surgery?

12
Potential advantages of thoracic epidural
analgesia for cardiac surgery
  • Reduction of neuroendocrine stress response
  • Cardiac sympathectomy
  • Improved GI motility
  • Intense postoperative analgesia
  • Reduced respiratory depression relative to
    opioids, earlier extubation?
  • Greater postoperative alertness
  • Reduced persisting postoperative pain?

Chaney. Ch 4 in Regional Anesthesia for Cardiac
Surgery, 2002 Liu, Carpenter, Neal.
Anesthesiology 1995821474-1506
13
Prospective trial of thoracic epidural analgesia
after CABG
VAS Pain Score on POD 1
  • 80 randomized to TEA vs iv morphine (MS)
  • VAS pain scale
  • Better pain scores, less postoperative stress
    depression with TEA
  • Improved PaO2 and peak expiratory flow rate with
    TEA

Royse. Ann Thorac Surg 20037593-100
14
Significantly improved recovery with TEA after
CABG
  • 420 patients
  • Propofol-alfentanil with
  • PCA morphine vs 0.125
  • bupiv clon (0.6 µg/mL
  • at 10 mL/h) for 96 hours
  • Study patients similar at
  • baseline (age, gender, number of coronary
    stenoses)
  • More alert - less postoperative confusion with
    TEA

Scott. Anesth Analg 200193528-35
15
No effect of TEA on recovery after cardiac
surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass
  • 60 patients received general anesthesia with
    thiopental, relaxant, fentanyl, isoflurane
  • Neostigmine glycopyrrolate at end of surgery
  • 30 patients received epidural
  • Puncture between T3 and T10 before induction
  • 0.5 bupivacaine (5-7 mL) morphine 20 µg/kg)
  • Postop 0.125 bupiv morphine 25 µg/mL 6 mL/h
  • 30 patients received iv morphine per protocol

Fillinger et al J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth
20021615-20
16
No effect of TEA on recovery after cardiac
surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass
  • Similar mean age (64, 62y), ejection fraction
    (60, 57), duration of cross clamp (56, 57 min)
    for GA vs. TEA
  • More vasoconstrictors, fewer vasodilators used by
    TEA group
  • No difference in cost or length of stay

Extubation time
N
Hours after surgery
Fillinger et al J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth
20021615-20
17
No effect of thoracic epidural on incidence or
severity of persistent sternotomy pain
  • Primary or re-do coronary surgery at Royal
    Melbourne Hospital (1997-1999) (n356)
  • Either TEA (n217) or opioid analgesia (n139)
  • 69 response (TEA n150, opioid n94) to survey
  • 29 incidence of persistent pain (25 persistent
    sternotomy pain)
  • No between group difference incidence (TEA 25,
    opioid 26) or severity of sternontomy pain

Ho et al. Anesth Analg 200295820-3
18
Items for Discussion
  • History of coronary surgery and epidural
    techniques
  • Thoracic epidural analgesia for cardiac surgery
  • Thoracic epidural anesthesia for cardiac surgery
  • Spinal anesthesia and analgesia for cardiac
    surgery
  • Are the risks small and the benefits large for
    regional techniques in cardiac surgery?
  • Summary

19
Potential advantages of thoracic epidural
anesthesia for cardiac surgery
  • Reduction of neuroendocrine stress response
  • Cardiac sympathectomy
  • Improved GI motility
  • Intense postoperative analgesia
  • Reduced respiratory depression relative to
    opioids, earlier extubation?
  • Greater postoperative alertness
  • Reduced persisting postoperative pain?
  • No delay for extubation
  • Rapid mobilization and recovery

Chaney. Ch 4 in Regional Anesthesia for Cardiac
Surgery, 2002 Liu, Carpenter, Neal.
Anesthesiology 1995821474-1506
20
Coronary artery bypass grafting in the awake
patient Three years' experience in 137 patients
  • Oct 1998 Jan 2002
  • 47 females, 90 males
  • Target vessels
  • LAD 122
  • RCA 6
  • LAD RCA 7
  • LAD CFX 2

Karagoz et al. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
20031251204-7
21
Coronary artery bypass grafting in the awake
patient Three years' experience in 137 patients
  • Surgical approach
  • Median sternotomy n63
  • MIDCAB n74
  • Rib cage lift n32
  • H graft n42
  • 132 of 137 completed procedure awake
  • 58 patients bypassed the ICU
  • Mean length of stay 1 day (range 0-3)

Karagoz et al. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
20031251204-7
22
Coronary bypass grafting via sternotomy in
conscious patients
  • IRB approval
  • Thoracic epidural
  • Puncture at T1-T2 or T2-T3 one day before surgery
  • Ropivacaine 0.5 sufentanil 1.67 µg/mL at 20-30
    mL/hr until block established, then 2-5 mL/hr
    during surgery
  • Ropivacaine 0.16 sufentanil 1 µg/mL 2-5 mL/hr
    for postoperative analgesia

Meininger et al. World J Surg 200327534-8
23
Coronary bypass grafting via sternotomy in
conscious patients
  • Mean dose of 17 mL ropivacaine-sufentanil during
    surgery
  • 6 patients had IMA to LAD 1 patient had
    additional sequential jump graft to first
    diagonal branch
  • 1 patient required tracheal intubation for
    respiratory distress
  • Discharged after median 5 days (range 3-7)

Meininger et al. World J Surg 200327534-8
24
Thoracic epidural anesthesiafor OPCAB
  • Oct 1999 Dec 2000, 10 patients had OPCAB with
    TEA alone
  • No aspirin within 5 days of surgery
  • Epidural placed at T2-T3
  • Immediately before surgery
  • Catheter threaded 5 cm craniad
  • 15-20 mL of bupivacaine 0.5
  • Midazolam 2.5 mg and ketamine 50 mg given for
    jugular line placement and vein harvesting

Vanek et al Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 200120858-60
25
Thoracic epidural anesthesia for OPCAB
  • Heparin 100 U/kg iv
  • Total bupivacaine 20-25 mL total midazolam 5-10
    mg total ketamine 250-500 mg
  • Bupivacaine 0.5 5 mL at 4-6 hr intervals for
    analgesia in first 24 hours
  • Well tolerated in all patients
  • Maximum length of stay 5 days

Vanek et al Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 200120858-60
26
Items for Discussion
  • History of coronary surgery and epidural
    techniques
  • Addition of epidural analgesia to cardiac surgery
  • Thoracic epidural anesthesia for cardiac surgery
  • Spinal anesthesia and analgesia for cardiac
    surgery
  • Are the risks small and the benefits large for
    regional techniques in cardiac surgery?
  • Summary

27
Spinal opioid analgesia after cardiac surgery
  • Chaney reviewed 771 patients receiving
    intrathecal opioids
  • All reports of small studies
  • Intrathecal opioids produce reliable analgesia
  • Unclear benefit to early extubation (some report
    delayed extubation)
  • Only 7.6 of respondents to Goldstein used spinal
    techniques in cardiac surgery

Chaney. Anesth Analg 1997841211-21 Goldstein. J
Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth 200115158-68
28
What impairs ventricular function after cardiac
surgery?
  • Preexisting disease congenital, CAD, valvular
    disease, CHF
  • Neuroendocrine response to anesthesia and surgery
  • Systemic inflammatory response to CPB
  • Chronic ischemia
  • Stunning
  • Hibernating myocardium
  • ?1-AR downregulation

29
What impairs ventricular function after cardiac
surgery?
  • Preexisting disease congenital, CAD, valvular
    disease, CHF
  • Neuroendocrine response to anesthesia and surgery
  • Systemic inflammatory response to CPB
  • Chronic ischemia
  • Stunning
  • Hibernating myocardium
  • ?1-AR downregulation

Could spinal anesthesia improve ventricular
function after cardiac surgery?
30
High spinal for cardiac surgery reduces ß-AR
downregulation
ß-AR Bmax
  • Control vs 37.5 mg hyperbaric bupivacaine
  • SPA group had reduced epi, norepi, cortisol vs.
    control
  • When CPB gt1hr, less ß-receptor downregulation in
    SPA group

plt.02
Lee. Anesthesiology 200398499-510
31
Items for Discussion
  • History of coronary surgery and epidural
    techniques
  • Addition of epidural analgesia to cardiac surgery
  • Thoracic epidural anesthesia for cardiac surgery
  • Spinal anesthesia and analgesia for cardiac
    surgery
  • Are the risks small and the benefits large for
    regional techniques in cardiac surgery?
  • Summary

32
Thoracic epidural analgesia in coronary surgery
7 year experience
  • N714 patients having CABG with CPB
  • General anesthesia etomidate, fentanyl,
    cisatracurium volatile anesthetic
  • Epidural
  • T1-T2 or T2-T3 puncture on day of surgery
  • Catheter threaded 3 cm into space
  • 0.1 ml/kg ropivacaine 0.375 ropivacaine given in
    divided doses

Canto Pastor et al. J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth
2003 17154-9
33
Thoracic epidural analgesia in coronary surgery
7 year experience
  • Epidural infusion
  • 0.2 ropivacaine 6 ml/hr intraoperatively
  • 1 µg/mL fentanyl added to ropivacaine
    postoperatively

Canto Pastor et al. J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth
2003 17154-9
34
Thoracic epidural analgesia in coronary surgery
outcomes
  • 9 failed epidurals
  • 6 dural punctures (used different site)
  • Dopamine commonly used to maintain BP
  • No epidural hematomas (95 confidence limit 3/714
    0.4)
  • 20 myocardial infarcts 56 deaths

Extubation time
N
Canto Pastor et al. J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth
2003 17154-9
35
Techniques for avoiding a rare adverse event
epidural hematoma
  • Normalization of coagulation before
    instrumentation
  • Avoid repeat attempts
  • Postpone surgery for 24 hr after blood tap
  • Perform tap gt1 hr before heparinization
  • Optimize hemostasis after CPB
  • Remove catheter with normal hemostasis
  • Careful neurological surveillance
  • ?Midline technique
  • ?Saline through needle before catheter placed

Ho et al. Chest 2000117551-5
36
ASRA Neuraxial Anesthesiaand Heparin
AnticoagulationConsensus Statement
  • Neuraxial techniques acceptable in patients who
    will receive heparin
  • Avoid technique if other coagulopathies present
  • Delay heparin gt1 hr after needle placement
  • Remove catheter gt2 hours after last heparin dose
  • Use minimal concentration of local anesthetic
  • Use clinical judgement in event of bloody tap

ASRA Consensus Statements p6, 1998
37
Estimating the incidence of a rare adverse event
epidural hematoma
  • Risk of epidural hematoma estimate to be lt1 of
    200,000 with epidural for noncardiac surgery
  • More than 4,500 TEA procedures have been reported
    in cardiac surgery patients, with no reported
    hematomas
  • 95 upper confidence limit is 3/N or 1/1500

Ho et al. Chest 2000117551-5
38
Items for Discussion
  • History of coronary surgery and epidural
    techniques
  • Thoracic epidural analgesia for cardiac surgery
  • Thoracic epidural anesthesia for cardiac surgery
  • Spinal anesthesia and analgesia for cardiac
    surgery
  • Are the risks small and the benefits large for
    regional techniques in cardiac surgery?
  • Summary

39
Regional anesthesia for cardiac surgery Summary
  • Thoracic epidural effective, probably safe
    anesthesia for coronary bypass surgery
  • Thoracic epidural provides good postoperative
    analgesia (not ideal for pain from saphenous vein
    or radial artery harvesting)
  • Spinal anesthesia may attenuate ß-receptor
    downregulation (unknown importance)
  • Spinal opioids effective for postoperative pain,
    probably safe
  • Risk of hematoma small, but unknown

http//www.wfubmc.edu/anesthesia/  Select
Education and then click on Brazil
40
Uncoupling of ?1-ARs fromadenylyl cyclase after
CPB
pmol cAMP/mg protein
  • Preserved number of receptors
  • Reduced cAMP production
  • in response to agonists
  • No effect of prior CHF or
  • ?-AR blockers on intraop
  • uncoupling
  • Defect localized to adenylyl
  • cyclase

plt.005
Gerhardt. Circulation 199898II275-81 Booth.
Anesthesiology 199889602-11
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