Barry N'Diris, M Miller Karen, Ryshen Gregory, Uffman Joshua, Taghon Thomas A, Tobias Joseph D
Department of Anesthesiology & Pain Medicine, Nationwide Children's Hospital, Columbus, OH, USA.
The Ohio State University College of Medicine, Nationwide Children's Hospital, Columbus, OH, USA.
Paediatr Anaesth. 2016 May;26(5):504-11. doi: 10.1111/pan.12874. Epub 2016 Mar 12.
The goal of this study was to identify the etiology of events and demographics of patients that experience complications requiring activation of the Rapid Response Team (RRT) during the first 24 h following anesthetic care.
We performed a retrospective review of the Quality Improvement database from the Department of Anesthesiology & Pain Medicine at Nationwide Children's Hospital. The database was searched to identify those patients who had a RRT evaluation activated within 24 h of receiving anesthesia or procedural sedation. These patients' charts were reviewed to obtain demographic information, etiology of the RRT call, and outcomes.
The study cohort included 106 RRT calls that were made over a 3-year period. Six patients were excluded from analysis due to incomplete datasets. One hundred patients remained for analysis including 60 males and 40 females. Patients ranged in age from 0.08 to 31.21 years (7.8 ± 7.7 years, median 5.3 years). Seventy-one patients were American Society of Anesthesiologists' (ASA) status 3 or 4 and 29 patients were ASA status 1 or 2. Five calls were made for patients who had undergone procedural sedation while the other 95 were on patients who received general anesthesia. The average time to the RRT call after the end of anesthetic care was 11.4 ± 6.6 h. Respiratory concern was the most common reason for RRT initiation, accounting for 71 of the 100 calls. Forty-nine patients had a recent respiratory illness, chronic respiratory-related disease, or history of preterm birth. Fifty patients (50%) were transferred to a higher level of care following the RRT consult. There was no significant difference between age, gender, ASA status, or etiology of the event for patients transferred vs. those who were not. A significant difference was noted in the Pediatric Early Warning Score of patients transferred to a higher level of care in comparison to patients who remained on the floor (4 ± 2 vs. 3 ± 2, P = 0.0097).
RRT calls were most common for respiratory concerns. High ASA status, general anesthesia administration, and the presence of acute or chronic conditions prior to anesthetic administration predispose a patient to perioperative complications resulting in the need for an RRT call.
本研究的目的是确定麻醉护理后24小时内发生需要启动快速反应团队(RRT)的并发症的患者事件病因及人口统计学特征。
我们对全国儿童医院麻醉与疼痛医学科的质量改进数据库进行了回顾性研究。检索该数据库以确定那些在接受麻醉或程序性镇静后24小时内启动RRT评估的患者。查阅这些患者的病历以获取人口统计学信息、RRT呼叫的病因及结果。
研究队列包括3年内进行的106次RRT呼叫。由于数据集不完整,6例患者被排除在分析之外。剩余100例患者进行分析,其中男性60例,女性40例。患者年龄范围为0.08至31.21岁(平均7.8±7.7岁,中位数5.3岁)。71例患者美国麻醉医师协会(ASA)分级为3或4级,29例患者ASA分级为1或2级。5次呼叫是针对接受程序性镇静的患者,另外95次是针对接受全身麻醉的患者。麻醉护理结束后至RRT呼叫的平均时间为11.4±6.6小时。呼吸问题是启动RRT最常见的原因,100次呼叫中有71次是为此。49例患者近期有呼吸道疾病、慢性呼吸道相关疾病或早产史。50例患者(50%)在RRT会诊后被转至更高护理级别。转院患者与未转院患者在年龄、性别、ASA分级或事件病因方面无显著差异。与留在病房的患者相比,转至更高护理级别的患者的儿科早期预警评分有显著差异(4±2对3±2,P = 0.0097)。
RRT呼叫最常见的原因是呼吸问题。高ASA分级、全身麻醉以及麻醉前存在急性或慢性疾病使患者易发生围手术期并发症,从而需要进行RRT呼叫。