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[Anesthesia in reoperations in abdominal surgery].

J Kienlen, J Arnefaux, L Brabet

    Annales De L'Anesthesiologie Francaise
    |July 1, 1975
    PubMed
    Summary
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    Reoperations in abdominal surgery pose significant risks, but anesthetic techniques, primarily narco-ataralgesic anesthesia, were not directly linked to patient deaths. Careful drug selection is crucial for managing high-risk patients during these critical abdominal reinterventions.

    Area of Science:

    • Anesthesiology
    • Surgical Reintervention
    • Abdominal Surgery

    Background:

    • Reoperations in abdominal surgery involve complex patient conditions and varied anesthetic approaches.
    • Patients undergoing reintervention often present with severe complications, including organ failure.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To evaluate the anesthetic techniques and outcomes in patients undergoing reinterventions in abdominal surgery.
    • To identify a practical approach for managing anesthesia in high-risk surgical reoperations.

    Main Methods:

    • Retrospective analysis of 51 patients undergoing abdominal reinterventions.
    • Review of anesthetic protocols, drug usage, and patient outcomes, including operative risk and complications.

    Main Results:

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    • The majority of initial interventions were in the supra-mesocolic region.
    • Patients undergoing reintervention frequently presented with catastrophic conditions like renal and respiratory failure.
    • Narco-ataralgesic anesthesia was commonly employed, with drug choices adapted to patient status; however, drug consumption did not significantly differ between initial and reinterventions.
    • No deaths were directly attributed to anesthetic techniques, except for one instance of circulatory arrest during induction in a patient with hemorrhagic shock.

    Conclusions:

    • Anesthetic management in abdominal reoperations, while challenging due to patient acuity, did not show a direct link to mortality.
    • The study suggests a need for refined anesthetic strategies and careful drug selection for high-risk patients in surgical reinterventions.