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Postoperative Complications With Monitored Anesthesia Care Essay

Postoperative Complications of Patients Undergoing Monitored Anesthesia Care

Introduction

Monitored anesthesia care (MAC) is commonly used for various surgical and diagnostic procedures, including endoscopies, minor orthopedic surgeries, and certain types of interventional radiology procedures. The goal of this intervention is to provide a comfortable and safe experience for the patient while allowing the healthcare team to perform the necessary, sometimes invasive procedures. The level of sedation can vary, ranging from minimal (light sedation) to moderate (conscious sedation) depending on the requirements of the procedure and patients individual needs. The purpose of this literature review is to develop the findings needed to articulate a comprehensive PICOT question that can serve as the foundation for a capstone project change proposal, addressing the clinical problem associated with postoperative complications in patients who have received MAC.

A comparison of research questions

The research questions in the first two studies (numbers correspond to evaluation table numbering) reviewed examined optimal sedation dosing during MAC for varicose vein stripping surgery to avoid respiratory depression and compare surgical outcomes for sialendoscopy with MAC versus general anesthesia. The third and fourth questions investigated whether MAC has comparable rates of postoperative complications and mortality to general anesthesia for transcatheter aortic valve replacement surgery, and whether adding a supraglottic airway to MAC can achieve similar procedural efficiency and adverse events as standard MAC without an airway device. Additional research questions introduced other aspects of MAC.

The fifth studys research question focused on using a respiratory volume monitor to improve safety for patients getting gastrointestinal endoscopies with MAC. By contrast, the sixth studys research question compared deep sedation MAC to general anesthesia for atrial septal defect closure surgery in terms of outcomes and complications. The penultimate studys research question investigated whether administering dexmedetomidine during MAC or general anesthesia affects post-anesthesia care unit length of stay for ambulatory surgery patients. Finally, the eighth focuses on when providers should convert MAC to general anesthesia when sedation causes airway instability.

While the specifics of these studies varied, all of the research questions ultimately aim to clarify the optimal approach...

The research questions also sought to determine how MAC compares to general anesthesia for many surgeries regarding complications, mortality, recovery times, procedural efficiency, and other important outcomes.

A comparison of sample populations

The sample populations come from academic hospitals, medical centers, and surgical databases across the United States. The first study utilized hospital data on transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) procedures from the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program registry. The second study was conducted at an academic hospital among 51 patients getting varicose vein stripping surgery...

…predispose some analyses to type II errors failing to detect true differences between groups when effects are subtle. Larger multi-center trials could improve statistical power and external validity. In addition, and perhaps most importantly, the criterion for converting MAC to general anesthesia was not standardized and left to clinical judgment, introducing subjectivity and variability. Therefore, more objective, protocolized criteria could facilitate comparisons between groups.

It is also important to note that self-reported measures like patient satisfaction and some complications (nausea, pain) have inherent subjectivity vulnerable to placebo effects. Blinded outcome assessors would optimize objectivity. Finally, the single-center nature for most studies means findings may not apply to other settings with variable provider experience, monitoring capabilities, and patient factors; multi-center designs enhance result reproducibility and improve the trustworthiness of the findings that emerge from these types of studies.

Conclusion and recommendations for further research

The findings that emerged from the comparison of the eight studies selected for these analyses identified a number of commonalities and differences in study design, sampling and analytical strategies, but with the common focus on optimizing patient safety and clinical outcomes using MAC. Despite the value of this and other previous research in this area, additional studies using high-quality randomized trials, expanded follow-up periods, larger multi-center samples, blinded outcome adjudication, and standardized management protocols could help provide valuable evidence to guide MAC utilization and improve patient…

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References

Abbett, S.K., Urman, R.D., Resor, C.D., & Brovman, E.Y. (2021, February). The effect of anesthesia type on outcomes in patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve replacement. J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth, 35(2), 429-435.

Cho, S., Han, J.I., Baik, H.J., Kim, D.Y., & Chun, E.H. (2021. April). Monitored anesthesia care for great saphenous vein stripping surgery with target-controlled infusion of propofol and remifentanil: a prospective study. Korean J Anesthesiol, 69(2), 155-160.

Haobo, M., Wachtendorf, L.J., Santer, P., Schaefer, M.S., Friedrich, S., Nabel, S., Ramachandran, S.K., Shen, C., Sundar, E., Eikermann, M. (2021, September). The effect of intraoperative dexmedetomidine administration on length of stay in the post anesthesia care unit in ambulatory surgery: a hospital registry study. J Clin Anesth, 72, 110284Kim, S., Chang, B. A., Rahman, A. et al. (2021, June). Analysis of urgent/emergent conversions from monitored anesthesia care to general anesthesia with airway instrumentation. BMC Anesthesiol, 29;21(1), 183.

Mastrolonardo, E., Stewart, M., Alapati, R., Thaler, A., Zhan, T., Curry, J.M., Luginbuhl, A.J., & Cognetti, D.M. (2021, January-February). Comparison of general anesthesia and monitored anesthesia care for sialendoscopy procedures. Am J Otolaryngol, 42(1), 102809.

Musuku, S.R., Capua, C.A.D., Doshi, I., Byun, Y., & Shapeton, A.D. (2021). Outcomes of transfemoral transcatheter aortic valve replacement performed with general anesthesia using a supraglottic airway versus monitored anesthesia care. J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth, 35(6), 1760-1768.

Nichols, R.H., Blinn, J.A., Ho, T.M., McQuitty, R.A., & Kinsky, M.P. (2018, April). Respiratory volume monitoring reduces hypoventilation and apnea in subjects undergoing procedural sedation. Respir Care, 63(4), 448-454.

Park, Y-S., Choi, D-K., Kang, J., Joung, K-W., & Choi, I-C. (2019, April). Comparison between monitored anesthesia care and general anesthesia in patients undergoing device closure of atrial septal defect. J Thorac Dis, 11(4), 1421-1427.

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