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Related Experiment Videos

Crisis management during anaesthesia: embolism.

J A Williamson1, S C Helps, R N Westhorpe

  • 1Australian Patient Safety Foundation, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.

Quality & Safety in Health Care
|June 4, 2005
PubMed
Summary

A structured algorithm for managing anesthesia-related embolism could improve diagnosis and patient care. This approach, tested on Australian Incident Monitoring Study data, showed potential for earlier recognition and better outcomes in over 40% of cases.

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Area of Science:

  • Anesthesiology
  • Critical Care Medicine
  • Patient Safety

Background:

  • Embolism during anesthesia, caused by various substances, presents significant diagnostic and management challenges.
  • Sudden, unexpected embolic events require prompt and effective interventions by anesthesiologists.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To evaluate a structured algorithm, "COVER ABCD-A SWIFT CHECK" with an embolism sub-algorithm, for managing anesthesia-associated embolism.
  • To assess the algorithm's potential impact on diagnosis and management based on real-world incident data.

Main Methods:

  • Retrospective analysis of 4000 incidents from the Australian Incident Monitoring Study (AIMS).
  • Comparison of the proposed structured approach's potential performance against actual management reported by anesthesiologists for embolism cases.

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Main Results:

  • Out of 4000 incidents, 38 involved embolism.
  • Key indicators of embolism included sudden drops in end-tidal carbon dioxide and oxygen saturation (in ~67% of cases).
  • Hypotension and ECG changes were observed in about one-third of embolism cases.

Conclusions:

  • An explicit, structured approach to diagnosing and managing embolism during anesthesia shows significant potential value.
  • This algorithm could lead to earlier recognition and/or improved management in over 40% of anesthesia-related embolism incidents.