Naqvi Syed Y, Rabiei Amin H, Maltenfort Mitchell G, Restrepo Camilo, Viscusi Eugene R, Parvizi Javad, Rasouli Mohammad R
Department of Internal Medicine, Pennsylvania Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania Health System, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Rothman Institute of Orthopaedics, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
J Arthroplasty. 2017 Sep;32(9):2680-2683. doi: 10.1016/j.arth.2017.04.040. Epub 2017 Apr 27.
This study aims to evaluate the effect of sleep apnea (SA) on perioperative complications after total joint arthroplasty (TJA) and whether the type of anesthesia influences these complications.
Using the ninth and tenth revisions of the International Classification of Diseases, coding systems, we queried our institutional TJA database from January 2005 to June 2016 to identify patients with SA who underwent TJA. These patients were matched in a 1:3 ratio based on age, gender, type of surgery, and comorbidities to patients who underwent TJA but were not coded for SA. Perioperative complications were identified using the same coding systems. Multivariate analysis was used to test if SA is an independent predictor of perioperative complications and if type of anesthesia can affect these complications.
A total of 1246 patients with SA were matched to 3738 patients without SA. Pulmonary complications occurred more frequently in patients with SA (1.7% vs 0.6%; P < .001), confirmed using multivariate analysis (odds ratio = 2.91; 95% confidence interval, 1.58-5.36; P = .001). Use of general anesthesia increased risk of all but central nervous system complications and mortality (odds ratio = 15.88; 95% confidence interval, 3.93-64.07; P < .001) regardless of SA status compared with regional anesthesia. Rates of pulmonary and gastrointestinal complications, acute anemia, and mortality were lower in SA patients when regional anesthesia was used (P < .05).
SA increases risk of postoperative pulmonary complications. The use of regional anesthesia may reduce risk of pulmonary complications and mortality in SA patients undergoing TJA.
本研究旨在评估睡眠呼吸暂停(SA)对全关节置换术(TJA)围手术期并发症的影响,以及麻醉类型是否会影响这些并发症。
我们使用国际疾病分类第九版和第十版编码系统,查询了2005年1月至2016年6月我们机构的TJA数据库,以识别接受TJA的SA患者。这些患者根据年龄、性别、手术类型和合并症以1:3的比例与接受TJA但未编码为SA的患者进行匹配。使用相同的编码系统识别围手术期并发症。多变量分析用于测试SA是否是围手术期并发症的独立预测因素,以及麻醉类型是否会影响这些并发症。
共有1246例SA患者与3738例无SA患者进行了匹配。SA患者肺部并发症的发生率更高(1.7%对0.6%;P <.001),多变量分析证实了这一点(优势比 = 2.91;95%置信区间,1.58 - 5.36;P =.001)。与区域麻醉相比,无论SA状态如何,使用全身麻醉会增加除中枢神经系统并发症和死亡率外所有并发症的风险(优势比 = 15.88;95%置信区间,3.93 - 64.07;P <.001)。当使用区域麻醉时,SA患者的肺部和胃肠道并发症、急性贫血及死亡率较低(P <.05)。
SA增加术后肺部并发症的风险。使用区域麻醉可能会降低接受TJA的SA患者肺部并发症和死亡率的风险。