Anesthetics Conduct Flashcards

1
Q

Define 1 “arm-brain” circulation?

A

The time it takes for an IV GA injected into the arm to reach the brain. ~20s

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2
Q

What are “Planes” of anaesthesia?

A

1) Sedation
2) Excitation
3) Anaesthesia (Light->Deep)

IV goes so fast you don’t notice them
Inhalational, the patient passes through these planes

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3
Q

What do we use to monitor a patient’s conscious level during Induction?

A
Verbal contact
Movement
Resp Pattern
EEG
"Planes"
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4
Q

What are the stages for an anesthetist during surgery?

A
Pre-op assessment
Prep
Induction
Maintenance
Emergence
Recovery
Post-op care
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5
Q

In order of “seriousness”, what are the types of airway maintenance?

A

1) Triple airway manoeuvre
2) Face mask
3) Oropharyngeal (Guedel) airway
4) Laryngeal mask airway

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6
Q

What’s involved in the Triple Airway Manoeuvre?

A

Head Tilt
Chin lift
Jaw Thrust

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7
Q

What is a Laryngeal mask airway?

A

A cuffed tube with a mask that sits over the glottis

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8
Q

What complications could occur during induction of anesthesia?

A

Obstruction

Aspiration

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9
Q

What could cause airway obstruction under anesthesia?

A

Ineffective Triple Airway Maneouvre
Airway device malposition/kinking
Laryngospasm

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10
Q

Why might patient’s aspirate under anesthesia?

A

They lose protective airway reflexes like gag, swallow and cough
Plus lots of foreign material like gastric contents, blood and surgical debris

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11
Q

Define airway Maintenance and airway Protection?

A

A Maintained airway is open & unobstructed

A protected airway is protected from contamination. Only endotracheal intubation will do this

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12
Q

What is endotracheal intubation?

A

A cuffed tube is placed in the trachea via the oral route using a laryngoscope, muscle relaxant and “sniffing the air” position

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13
Q

Why do we need muscle relaxant in endotracheal intubation?

A

To abolish the laryngeal reflexes

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14
Q

Why would you choose to intubate a patient?

A

1) Protects from gastric contents in unfasted (emergency) patients
2) For ventilation when using muscle relaxants
3) If there’s risk of blood contamination e.g. tonsilectomy
4) When needing to tightly control blood gasses e.g. neurosurgery
5) When there will be restricted airway access e.g. Maxfax

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15
Q

What parameters can we measure to monitor a patient under anaesthesia?

A
SpO2, ECG, NIBP, FiO2 & ETCO2
Resp parameters
Agent Monitoring
Temp, urine output and NMJ
Invasive venous/arterial monitoring
Processed EEG
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16
Q

What common problems occur during recovery?

A

A,B & C problems
Pain
N&V

Hence it’s done in a dedicated area with trained staff

17
Q

What are the major risks to a patient during anesthesia?

A
Airway problems
Temperature (too cold or too hot)
Loss of other protective reflexes e.g. corneal can cause injury
VTE
Consent/ID
Pressure areas
18
Q

What are the major types of LA blocks?

A

Spinal
Epidural
Plexus block
Nerve block