Anesthesia complications range from minor to catastrophic.
complications of general anesthesia might be due to difficulty in airway management or ventilation.
Also the complication might be due to cardiac arrhythmias and poor response to anesthetic effect during induction or maintenance or even the ...
Anesthesia complications range from minor to catastrophic.
complications of general anesthesia might be due to difficulty in airway management or ventilation.
Also the complication might be due to cardiac arrhythmias and poor response to anesthetic effect during induction or maintenance or even the emergence from anesthesia.
So, the the systematic response to the effect of the anesthesia may occur at any time during surgery.
Some of the complications:
Hypoxia, arrhythmia, hypotension , hypertension, regurgitation and aspiration, hypothermia hypoglycemia, coronary ischemia, embolism, persistent apnea delayed recovery , and many others.
also regional anesthesia has its complications like nerve injury, post spinal headache.
Toxicity from local anesthesia is one of the important complication might occur during local infiltration.
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Added: Nov 12, 2022
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Complications of Anesthesia Mahmood Hasan Taha H.D \ Anesthesia Head of Anesthesia Dep. Zakho Emergency H. May\ 2018
A re inevitable even with most experienced doctors. These complications range from minor to to catastrophic.
Complications of G.A Intraoperative complications. Postoperative complications.
Intraoperative complications Due to: Laryngoscopy. ETT Induction. Maintenance.
Complications of laryngoscopy
Trauma to: lips Teeth Tonque Tonsillar pillar Epiglottis. Vocal Cords.
Complications of ETT
Injury to vocal cords. Injury to trachea. Blockage of tube – secretions, blood clot, foreign body. Bronchospasm.
Nerve injury: Regional A. & GA. abolish protective reflexes & predispose patient to injury . Peroneal n, U lnar n., Radial n., Brachial plexus. Any position, lithotomy, lateral decubitus .
Patient with contractures → positioned before induction of anesthesia. Final positioning should be evaluated before draping . Sensory or motor dysfunction → usually temporary (2-12 weeks). Nerve conduction or EMG are indicated to document where the damage is new or chronic.
position Complication Sitting, prone, Reversed Trendelenburg. Venous air embolism Lithotomy Extremity compartment syndrome Prone, Sitting Retinal ischemia
Position C omplication any, specially prone Corneal abrasion-ION any Backache Supine, Lithotomy, Trendelenburg. Alopecia any Skin necrosis
Awareness
Intraoperative awareness → mild anxiety to PTSD Incidence : Auditory perceptions: 50% (ASA 2008). Non obstetrics and non cardiac surgeries ≈0.1% to 0.2%
Cardiac surgery: 1.1% to 1.5 % Obstetric 0.4 % Trauma 11% to 43%
Risk factors: Light level of anesthesia: hypovolemic, injured, obstetric patient. Prior history of awareness. Cardiac surgery. Using MR (awake paralysis).
Empty vaporizers . IV machine malfunction or disconnection . Chronic substance abuse .
Hearing loss Usually transient, unrecognized. Post d ural puncture: 50% Post G.A: barotrauma, vascular injury. Drugs: aminoglycoside, NSAID, loop diuretics. Post cardiac surgery: unilateral, embolism?
Human errors that may lead to preventable anesthetic accident Unrecognized breathing circuit disconnection. Mistaken drug administration. Airway mismanagement.
Anesthesia machine misuse. Fluid mismanagement. Intravenous line disconnection.
Complications of Neuroaxial Block
Common: Hypotension, Bradycardia….? ↑ sensitivity to sedative medications. Nausea & Vomiting…..? Postdural puncture headache….? Back pain & paresthesia….?
Less common: Nerve injury. Cauda equina syndrome. Total spinal. Meningitis. Hematoma, abscess formation.