Kawashima Yasuo, Seo Norimasa, Tsuzaki Koichi, Iwao Yasuhide, Morita Kiyoshi, Irita Kazuo, Obara Hidefumi
Department of Anesthesiology, Teikyo University School of Medicine, Tokyo 173-8605.
Masui. 2003 Jun;52(6):666-82.
We reported anesthesia-related mortality and morbidity in Japanese Society of Anesthesiologists Certified Training Hospitals (JSACTH) in the year 2001, as a part of the second series of annual studies in the identical questionnaires form started in 1999. JSA Committee on Operating Room Safety sent confidential questionnaires to 813 JSACTH and received effective answers from 87.9% of the hospitals. A total number of 1,284,957 anesthetics were documented. The respondents were asked to report all cases of cardiac arrests and other critical incidents (serious hypotension, serious hypoxemia and others) during anesthesia and surgery, and their outcomes (death in operating room, death within 7 days, transfer to vegetative state and rescue without sequelae) as well as one principal cause for each incident from the list of 52 items. Definition of serious hypotension, serious hypoxemia and others was those events suggesting the possibility of impending cardiac arrest or permanent disability of the central nervous system or myocardium. The respondents were also requested to submit the tabulation of patients by ASA physical status, age distribution, surgery sites and anesthetic methods. Analysis was made by total incidents under anesthesia/surgery, and also by incidents totally attributable to anesthetic management (AM), due to preoperative complications (PC), due to intraoperative pathological events (IP) and due to surgery (SG). This paper focused on analysis of entire patients, as other later papers will report analyses with special reference to ASA physical status, age distribution, surgery sites and anesthetic methods. Total incidence of cardiac arrest under anesthesia/surgery was 6.12 per 10,000 anesthetics. PC, IP and SG occupied 47.2%, 21.1% and 24.2% of principal causes of total cardiac arrest, respectively. AM occupied only 6.4% of the principal causes and the incidence was 0.39 per 10,000. The most frequent cause of cardiac arrest in 52 more detailed classifications of principal causes was preoperative hemorrhagic shock that occupied 19.2% of all cardiac arrests. The second was massive hemorrhage due to surgical procedures (12.3%), and the third was surgery itself (9.7%). Prognosis of the cardiac arrest was worst in that due to PC, i.e. 86.1% of cardiac arrests died in the operating room or within 7 days after surgery and only 5.3% survived without sequelae. Very low survival rate of preoperative hemorrhagic shock (5.3%) and preoperative multiple organ failure/sepsis (7.1%) aggravated the prognosis. Pulmonary embolism was the worst single cause in prognosis of cardiac arrest due to IP. The best prognosis was found in cardiac arrest due to AM, 82.0% survived without sequelae and 10.0% died. The mortality rate after cardiac arrest was 3.04 per 10,000 anesthetics, of them 0.04 was due to AM, 0.43 due to IP, 1.89 due to PC and 0.67 due to SG. The mortality rate after critical incidents other than cardiac arrest such as severe hypotension and severe hypoxemia was 3.37, and of them 0.06 was due to AM, 0.23 due to IP, 2.25 due to PC and 0.82 due to SG. The final mortality rate attributable to anesthesia/surgery including deaths after cardiac arrest and after other critical incidents was 6.41 per 10,000 anesthetics. The final mortality rate totally attributable to AM was 0.10 per 10,000 anesthetics, which was significantly improved from 0.21 [0.15, 0.27], that of mean [95%C.I.] in 1994-1998. IP, PC and SG showed the final mortality rate of 0.65, 4.14 and 1.49, respectively. Three major causes of all critical incidents in 52 detailed classification of principal causes were preoperative hemorrhagic shock (31.4%), massive hemorrhage due to surgical procedures (16.9%), and preoperative multiple organ failure/sepsis (9.0%). In conclusion, the obtained incidences as to cardiac arrest and death, either in total number during anesthesia/surgery or in that due to anesthetic management, kept decreasing lineally through 8 years study in 1994-2001. We expect that this second series of annual studies for five-years should reveal precise and definite direction for us to reduce anesthesia-related mortality and morbidity by analyzing further detail with special reference to ASA physical status, age distribution, surgery sites and anesthetic methods.
作为始于1999年的同一系列年度研究的一部分,我们报告了2001年日本麻醉医师协会认证培训医院(JSACTH)的麻醉相关死亡率和发病率。日本麻醉医师协会手术室安全委员会向813家JSACTH发送了保密问卷,收到了87.9%的医院的有效回复。共记录了1,284,957例麻醉病例。要求受访者报告麻醉和手术期间所有心脏骤停及其他严重事件(严重低血压、严重低氧血症等)的病例及其结果(手术室死亡、7天内死亡、转为植物人状态及无后遗症的抢救成功),以及从52项列表中为每个事件列出的一个主要原因。严重低血压、严重低氧血症等的定义是那些提示即将发生心脏骤停或中枢神经系统或心肌永久性残疾可能性的事件。还要求受访者提交按美国麻醉医师协会(ASA)身体状况、年龄分布、手术部位和麻醉方法分类的患者列表。分析按麻醉/手术期间的总事件进行,也按完全归因于麻醉管理(AM)、术前并发症(PC)、术中病理事件(IP)和手术(SG)的事件进行。本文重点分析了全体患者,因为其他后续论文将报告特别参照ASA身体状况、年龄分布、手术部位和麻醉方法的分析。麻醉/手术期间心脏骤停的总发生率为每10,000例麻醉6.12例。PC、IP和SG分别占心脏骤停总主要原因的47.2%、21.1%和24.2%。AM仅占主要原因的6.4%,发生率为每10,000例0.39例。在52个更详细的主要原因分类中,心脏骤停最常见的原因是术前出血性休克,占所有心脏骤停的19.2%。其次是手术过程中大量出血(12.3%),第三是手术本身(9.7%)。因PC导致的心脏骤停预后最差,即86.1%的心脏骤停患者在手术室死亡或术后7天内死亡,仅5.3%无后遗症存活。术前出血性休克(5.3%)和术前多器官功能衰竭/脓毒症(7.1%)的极低存活率加重了预后。肺栓塞是因IP导致的心脏骤停预后中最严重的单一原因。因AM导致的心脏骤停预后最佳,82.0%无后遗症存活,10.0%死亡。心脏骤停后的死亡率为每10,000例麻醉3.04例,其中0.04例归因于AM,0.43例归因于IP,1.89例归因于PC,0.67例归因于SG。除心脏骤停外的严重事件如严重低血压和严重低氧血症后的死亡率为3.37,其中0.06例归因于AM,0.23例归因于IP,2.25例归因于PC,0.82例归因于SG。包括心脏骤停后和其他严重事件后的死亡在内,归因于麻醉/手术的最终死亡率为每10,000例麻醉6.41例。完全归因于AM的最终死亡率为每10,000例麻醉0.10例,与1994 - 1998年的平均值[95%置信区间]0.21[0.15, 0.27]相比有显著改善。IP、PC和SG的最终死亡率分别为0.65、4.14和1.49。在52个详细的主要原因分类中,所有严重事件的三个主要原因是术前出血性休克(31.4%)、手术过程中大量出血(16.9%)和术前多器官功能衰竭/脓毒症(9.0%)。总之,在1994 - 2001年的8年研究中,所获得的关于心脏骤停和死亡的发生率,无论是麻醉/手术期间的总数还是归因于麻醉管理的发生率,都呈直线下降趋势。我们期望这为期五年的第二系列年度研究通过特别参照ASA身体状况、年龄分布、手术部位和麻醉方法进行更详细的分析,为我们揭示降低麻醉相关死亡率和发病率的精确而明确方向。