Frawley Geoff, Bell Graham, Disma Nicola, Withington Davinia E, de Graaff Jurgen C, Morton Neil S, McCann Mary Ellen, Arnup Sarah J, Bagshaw Oliver, Wolfler Andrea, Bellinger David, Davidson Andrew J
From the Anaesthesia and Pain Management Research Group, Murdoch Childrens Research Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia (G.F., A.J.D.); Department of Anaesthesia and Pain Management, The Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia (G.F., A.J.D.); Department of Paediatrics, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia (G.F., A.J.D.); Department of Anaesthesia, Royal Hospital for Sick Children, Glasgow, United Kingdom (G.B., N.S.M.); Department of Anesthesia, Istituto Giannina Gaslini, Genoa, Italy (N.D.); Department of Anaesthesia, Montreal Children's Hospital, Montreal, Quebec, Canada (D.E.W.); Department of Anesthesia, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada (D.E.W.); Department of Anaesthesia, Wilhelmina Children's Hospital, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands (J.C.d.G.); Academic Unit of Anaesthesia, Pain and Critical Care, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom (N.S.M.); Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative, and Pain Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts (M.E.M.); Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics Unit, Murdoch Childrens Research Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia (S.J.A.); Department of Anaesthesia, Birmingham Children's Hospital, Birmingham, United Kingdom (O.B.); Department of Anesthesiology and Paediatric Intensive Care, Ospedale Pediatrico "Vittore Buzzi," Milan, Italy (A.W.); and Department of Neurology, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts (D.B.).
Anesthesiology. 2015 Jul;123(1):55-65. doi: 10.1097/ALN.0000000000000708.
Awake regional anesthesia (RA) is a viable alternative to general anesthesia (GA) for infants undergoing lower abdominal surgery. Benefits include lower incidence of postoperative apnea and avoidance of anesthetic agents that may increase neuroapoptosis and worsen neurocognitive outcomes. The General Anesthesia compared to Spinal anesthesia study compares neurodevelopmental outcomes after awake RA or GA in otherwise healthy infants. The aim of the study is to describe success and failure rates of RA and report factors associated with failure.
This was a nested cohort study within a prospective, randomized, controlled, observer-blind, equivalence trial. Seven hundred twenty-two infants 60 weeks or less postmenstrual age scheduled for herniorrhaphy under anesthesia were randomly assigned to receive RA (spinal, caudal epidural, or combined spinal caudal anesthetic) or GA with sevoflurane. The data of 339 infants, where spinal or combined spinal caudal anesthetic was attempted, were analyzed. Possible predictors of failure were assessed including patient factors, technique, experience of site and anesthetist, and type of local anesthetic.
RA was sufficient for the completion of surgery in 83.2% of patients. Spinal anesthesia was successful in 86.9% of cases and combined spinal caudal anesthetic in 76.1%. Thirty-four patients required conversion to GA, and an additional 23 patients (6.8%) required brief sedation. Bloody tap on the first attempt at lumbar puncture was the only risk factor significantly associated with block failure (odds ratio = 2.46).
The failure rate of spinal anesthesia was low. Variability in application of combined spinal caudal anesthetic limited attempts to compare the success of this technique to spinal alone.
对于接受下腹部手术的婴儿,清醒区域麻醉(RA)是全身麻醉(GA)的一种可行替代方案。其益处包括术后呼吸暂停发生率较低,以及避免使用可能增加神经细胞凋亡并恶化神经认知结局的麻醉剂。全麻与脊髓麻醉比较研究比较了健康婴儿在接受清醒RA或GA后的神经发育结局。本研究的目的是描述RA的成功率和失败率,并报告与失败相关的因素。
这是一项在前瞻性、随机、对照、观察者盲法、等效性试验中的巢式队列研究。722名月经龄60周或更小、计划在麻醉下进行疝修补术的婴儿被随机分配接受RA(脊髓麻醉、骶管硬膜外麻醉或脊髓骶管联合麻醉)或七氟醚全麻。对339名尝试进行脊髓或脊髓骶管联合麻醉的婴儿的数据进行了分析。评估了可能的失败预测因素,包括患者因素、技术、穿刺部位和麻醉医生的经验以及局部麻醉剂的类型。
83.2%的患者RA足以完成手术。脊髓麻醉86.9%的病例成功,脊髓骶管联合麻醉76.1%成功。34名患者需要转为GA,另外23名患者(6.8%)需要短暂镇静。首次腰椎穿刺时抽出带血脑脊液是与阻滞失败显著相关的唯一危险因素(比值比=2.46)。
脊髓麻醉的失败率较低。脊髓骶管联合麻醉应用的变异性限制了将该技术与单纯脊髓麻醉成功率进行比较的尝试。