医学
麻醉
血压
平均动脉压
肩关节手术
脑血流
七氟醚
坐
异丙酚
全身麻醉
血流动力学
镇静
血流
心率
心脏病学
内科学
病理
作者
Paul Soeding,Wang J,G Hoy,Paul Jarman,Helen Phillips,Paul Marks,Colin Royse
标识
DOI:10.1177/0310057x1103900315
摘要
The sitting upright or ‘beachchair’ position is commonly used for shoulder arthroscopic surgery. There is a theoretical concern that anaesthetised patients placed in this posture are at risk of reduced cerebral blood flow (CBF), especially if there is associated hypotension. This study investigated the effect of anaesthetic-induced hypotension on estimated cerebral blood flow in patients placed in the beachchair position for shoulder surgery. Forty patients were randomised to either sedation (propofol infusion 10 to 20 mg.hour -1 , n=20) or general anaesthesia using sub minimum alveolar concentration of sevoflurane (n=20). All patients received an interscalene brachial plexus regional block. Internal carotid artery blood flow was measured using the time averaged velocity of the spectral Doppler waveform, and was then used as an estimate of global CBF. Following a pre-anaesthesia study, measurement of internal carotid artery blood flow was made before and after beachchair positioning, and at five-minute intervals during surgery. Beachchair positioning during general anaesthesia significantly decreased the mean arterial pressure (34±10 mmHg) compared to sedation (4±2 mmHg, P <0.01), and vasopressor therapy was required more often. However, CBF remained constant in both anaesthetised (P=0.83) and sedated patients (P=0.68) despite beachchair positioning, and the fall in mean arterial pressure in the anaesthetised patients. There was no significant difference in CBF between groups (P=0.91). These findings indicate that in patients in the beachchair position receiving sevoflurane anaesthesia, CBF is maintained when mean arterial pressure is above 70 mmHg, consistent with intact autoregulation.
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