Your activity: 4 p.v.

Intraoperative risk mitigation strategies for obstructive sleep apnea

Intraoperative risk mitigation strategies for obstructive sleep apnea
Anesthetic risk Strategies and precautions
Airway obstruction and respiratory depression with sedatives and opioids
  • Avoid or minimize sedative premedication
  • Use titrated infusion rather than bolus dosing of sedatives to decrease episodic respiratory depression
  • Consider sedatives without respiratory depressant effects (eg, dexmedetomidine)
  • Use continuous oximetry and ventilation monitoring (eg, capnography) when sedatives are given
  • Use PAP device, hypoglossal nerve stimulator, or oral appliance for patients accustomed to these devices, if sedatives are administered
  • Administer supplemental oxygen to avoid hypoxemia during monitored anesthesia care
Gastroesophageal reflux disease and pulmonary aspiration
  • Premedicate with prophylactic agents (proton pump inhibitors, H2-receptor antagonists, or non-particulate antacids)
  • Consider cricoid pressure and rapid sequence induction and intubation
Difficult airway (mask ventilation, supraglottic airway ventilation, laryngoscopy, and intubation)
  • Assure availability of airway adjuncts and personnel for assistance
  • Position with head elevated (reverse Trendelenburg) for preoxygenation and laryngoscopy
  • Use maximally effective preoxygenation (tight-fitting mask, >3 minutes, consider PAP, end-tidal oxygen fraction of 0.87 to 0.9)
  • Use two-person mask ventilation if mask ventilation is difficult
  • Use apneic oxygenation with nasal oxygen insufflation or if available, transnasal humidified high-flow oxygen (up to 70 liters/minute–1) via purpose-made nasal cannulae, to prolong apnea time
  • Follow difficult airway guidelines and algorithms
  • Consider sugammadex for reversal of rocuronium or vecuronium in the cannot-intubate-cannot-oxygenate difficult airway scenario
Atelectasis and lung injury
  • Positive end expiratory pressure and lung recruitment maneuvers
  • Protective ventilation (low tidal volumes, low driving pressures, and low plateau pressures)
Rostral fluid shift leading to airway narrowing
  • Administer fluid judiciously
  • Avoid fluid with high salt content
  • Position head up when feasible
Prolonged postoperative effects of anesthetic agents (airway obstruction and respiratory depression)
  • Consider short-acting general anesthetic agents, including intravenous and insoluble volatile agents (eg, desflurane, remifentanil, propofol)
  • Minimize opioids by using regional anesthesia or multimodal analgesia techniques as appropriate (eg, nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs, COX-2 inhibitors, acetaminophen, tramadol, ketamine, dexmedetomidine, dexamethasone)
Post-extubation airway obstruction
  • Verify full reversal of neuromuscular blockade
  • Consider use of sugammadex for reversal of rocuronium (or vecuronium)
  • Extubate with patient awake (fully conscious and cooperative; airway reflexes intact)
  • Extubate and recover in a non-supine position (head-up or lateral)
  • Apply PAP early for patients using it preoperatively, or to treat hypoxemia or obstruction
  • Resume use of oral appliance or hypoglossal nerve stimulation therapy in patients using them preoperatively
PAP: positive airway pressure.
Graphic 93968 Version 3.0