Heart, Trauma and Sepsis Research Laboratory, College of Medicine and Dentistry, James Cook University, Queensland, 4811, Australia.
Int J Surg. 2020 Sep;81:47-54. doi: 10.1016/j.ijsu.2020.07.017. Epub 2020 Jul 29.
Globally, a staggering 310 million major surgeries are performed each year; around 40 to 50 million in USA and 20 million in Europe. It is estimated that 1-4% of these patients will die, up to 15% will have serious postoperative morbidity, and 5-15% will be readmitted within 30 days. An annual global mortality of around 8 million patients places major surgery comparable with the leading causes of death from cardiovascular disease and stroke, cancer and injury. If surgical complications were classified as a pandemic, like HIV/AIDS or coronavirus (COVID-19), developed countries would work together and devise an immediate action plan and allocate resources to address it. Seeking to reduce preventable deaths and post-surgical complications would save billions of dollars in healthcare costs. Part of the global problem resides in differences in institutional practice patterns in high- and low-income countries, and part from a lack of effective perioperative drug therapies to protect the patient from surgical stress. We briefly review the history of surgical stress and provide a path forward from a systems-based approach. Key to progress is recognizing that the anesthetized brain is still physiologically 'awake' and responsive to the sterile stressors of surgery. New intravenous drug therapies are urgently required after anesthesia and before the first incision to prevent the brain from switching to sympathetic overdrive and activating secondary injury progression such as hyperinflammation, coagulopathy, immune activation and metabolic dysfunction. A systems-based approach targeting central nervous system-mitochondrial coupling may help drive research to improve outcomes following major surgery in civilian and military medicine.
全球每年进行的重大手术数量惊人,达到 3.1 亿例;其中约有 4000 万至 5000 万例在美国,2000 万例在欧洲。据估计,这些患者中有 1%-4%会死亡,多达 15%会出现严重的术后发病率,5%-15%会在 30 天内再次入院。每年全球约有 800 万患者死亡,这使得重大手术与心血管疾病和中风、癌症和损伤等主要死亡原因相当。如果手术并发症被归类为大流行,如艾滋病病毒/艾滋病或冠状病毒(COVID-19),发达国家将共同努力,制定一个立即行动计划,并分配资源来解决这个问题。寻求减少可预防的死亡和术后并发症将节省数十亿美元的医疗保健费用。全球问题的一部分在于高收入和低收入国家机构实践模式的差异,另一部分在于缺乏有效的围手术期药物治疗来保护患者免受手术应激。我们简要回顾了手术应激的历史,并从系统方法的角度提供了前进的道路。取得进展的关键是认识到麻醉大脑仍然在生理上“清醒”,并对手术的无菌应激源有反应。麻醉后和第一次切口前急需新的静脉内药物治疗,以防止大脑切换到交感神经过度兴奋,并激活继发性损伤进展,如过度炎症、凝血障碍、免疫激活和代谢功能障碍。针对中枢神经系统-线粒体偶联的系统方法可能有助于推动研究,以改善民用和军事医学中重大手术后的结果。