Ortiz Vilma E, Vidal-Melo Marcos F, Walsh John L
Massachusetts General Hospital, Department of Anesthesia, Critical Care & Pain Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts.
Massachusetts General Hospital, Department of Anesthesia, Critical Care & Pain Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts.
Surg Obes Relat Dis. 2015 May-Jun;11(3):721-8. doi: 10.1016/j.soard.2014.11.021. Epub 2014 Dec 5.
The worldwide trend toward increasing body mass index (BMI) has caused the anesthetic management of overweight, obese, and severely obese patients to become common. The increase in oxygen demand coupled with the anatomic and physiologic changes associated with excess adipose tissue make maintenance of oxygenation a major challenge during induction, maintenance and recovery from general anesthesia. It is crucial for anesthesiologists, surgeons and perioperative healthcare providers alike to have a thorough understanding of the impact of airway management and mechanical ventilation on the respiratory care of the obese in the immediate perioperative setting. In this manuscript we aim to discuss the consequences of obesity, particularly abdominal obesity, on respiratory physiology and provide suggestions on intraoperative ventilatory strategies to maintain oxygenation in the severely obese patient undergoing pneumoperitoneum.
全球范围内体重指数(BMI)上升的趋势,使得超重、肥胖及重度肥胖患者的麻醉管理变得常见。氧需求增加,再加上与过多脂肪组织相关的解剖和生理变化,使得在全身麻醉诱导、维持和恢复过程中维持氧合成为一项重大挑战。对于麻醉医生、外科医生及围手术期医疗服务提供者而言,全面了解气道管理和机械通气对肥胖患者围手术期即刻呼吸护理的影响至关重要。在本手稿中,我们旨在讨论肥胖尤其是腹型肥胖对呼吸生理的影响,并就术中通气策略提出建议,以维持接受气腹手术的重度肥胖患者的氧合。