Derrington M C, Smith G
Br J Anaesth. 1987 Jul;59(7):815-33. doi: 10.1093/bja/59.7.815.
In the past two to three decades, advancing knowledge in the areas of physiology, pharmacology and scientific technology have allowed diversification from the purely technical aspects of administration of anaesthesia towards more accurate assessment of outcome for the individual in terms of both anaesthetic-induced morbidity and mortality. In addition, elucidation of the aetiology of the morbidity and mortality produced by anaesthesia, as opposed to that from surgery or concomitant medical or surgical disease processes, is assuming increased importance as a result of the expansion in medical litigation, where anaesthetists find themselves amongst the higher risk specialties in medicine. The morbidity produced by anaesthesia is relatively easy to define for specific populations, but the prediction of risk in an isolated individual remains elusive. For example, there are many studies indicating the incidence of postoperative myocardial infarction following surgical procedures in defined groups; but for the individual patient, more sophisticated risk assessments have so far failed to predict more accurately than the well-established ASA grading system. Nonetheless, it is expected that in future, studies in this area will permit increased precision in the assessment of risk, thereby permitting better consideration by both surgeon and patient of the options available regarding surgical and non-surgical therapy. Increasing emphasis on the safer administration of anaesthesia has been greatly aided by the use of the critical incident technique. By assessing near-misses in addition to existing morbidity and mortality, the technique increases the size and extent of the database, and by removal of the reticence inherent in an anaesthetist's confession of his mistakes, it increases the reporting of potential mishaps. Amongst the useful findings to have emerged from such studies is the previously unforeseen and unsuspected observation that the most dangerous period of anaesthesia is not during induction and recovery, but during the maintenance period. However, perhaps one of the more valuable aspects of this type of methodology is its potential use in quality control and audit within departments. There are undoubted problems and universally acknowledged difficulties in epidemiological research into anaesthetic mortality. Comparison of data between studies is rendered difficult owing to variations in procedure, including its prospective or retrospective nature, the definition of death, the perioperative time period studied, and the patient and hospital populations encompassed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
在过去二三十年里,生理学、药理学及科学技术领域知识的进步,使得麻醉管理从单纯的技术层面,朝着更准确评估个体麻醉相关发病率和死亡率的方向发展。此外,随着医疗诉讼案件的增加,明确麻醉导致的发病率和死亡率的病因(与手术或伴随的内科或外科疾病过程导致的病因相对)变得愈发重要,麻醉医生发现自己身处医学中风险较高的专业领域。对于特定人群而言,麻醉导致的发病率相对容易界定,但预测个体的风险仍然困难。例如,有许多研究表明了特定群体手术操作后心肌梗死的发生率;但对于个体患者,迄今为止,更为复杂的风险评估在预测准确性上并未超过成熟的美国麻醉医师协会(ASA)分级系统。尽管如此,预计未来该领域的研究会提高风险评估的精准度,从而使外科医生和患者能更好地考虑手术及非手术治疗的可选方案。对麻醉更安全管理的日益重视,很大程度上得益于危急事件技术的应用。通过除评估现有的发病率和死亡率之外,还评估险些发生的差错,该技术扩大了数据库的规模和范围,并且通过消除麻醉医生承认错误时固有的沉默,增加了对潜在事故的报告。这类研究得出的有用发现之一是,此前未预见到且未被怀疑的观察结果:麻醉最危险的时期不是诱导期和恢复期,而是维持期。然而,或许这类方法更有价值的一个方面是其在科室内部质量控制和审核中的潜在用途。在麻醉死亡率的流行病学研究中,无疑存在问题且有着公认的困难。由于研究程序的差异,包括前瞻性或回顾性性质、死亡的定义、研究的围手术期以及涵盖的患者和医院人群等,使得不同研究之间的数据比较变得困难。