Schwartz Jonathon, Parsey Darian, Mundangepfupfu Tichaendepi, Tsang Steven, Pranaat Robert, Wilson James, Papadakos Peter
Department of Anesthesiology, Stony Brook University Hospital, Stony Brook, NY, USA.
Stony Brook School of Medicine, Stony Brook, NY, USA.
Can J Respir Ther. 2020 Dec 4;56:79-85. doi: 10.29390/cjrt-2020-029. eCollection 2020.
The preoperative period has gained recognition as a crucial time to identify and manage preoperative medical conditions for preventing perioperative complications. Consequently, preoperative clinics have now become an essential component of perioperative care at many large hospitals. As the prevalence of preoperative clinics continues to grow, and the field of perioperative medicine progresses, respiratory therapists (RTs) will inevitably find a growing role to participate in preoperative patient optimization to mitigate pulmonary complications.
Keyword searches on perioperative pulmonary complications were conducted on the Medline database via PubMed and identified over 2000 candidate articles for review. Articles were included if they were English only and resulted with one or more of the following search terms; pulmonary complications, postoperative complications, postoperative pulmonary complications (PPCs), prehabilitation, incentive spirometry, smoking cessation, noninvasive ventilation. Preference was given for meta-analyses, randomized controlled trials, and systematic reviews. Publications within the past two decades were given additional preference toward final inclusion. The authors discussed eligible articles in group meetings over the span of multiple years to assess relevance and quality of data for narrowing eligible articles to the final selection of publications for the review.
The following narrative review examines preoperative optimization strategies to prevent PPCs and highlight areas where RTs may play a key role. After examining challenges in defining PPCs, the review examines key risk models available to predict PPCs and their implications for subsequent discussion on preventive measures that RTs may assist with in a multidisciplinary team.
RTs can reduce the health care burden of PPCs by assisting fellow perioperative clinicians in providing respiratory care for patients with premorbid conditions. While much of our review focused on pre-existing pulmonary pathologies and both the pharmacological and nonpharmacological optimization of these pathologies, there are other factors contributing to PPCs deserving future exploration.
术前阶段已被公认为是识别和处理术前医疗状况以预防围手术期并发症的关键时期。因此,术前诊所现已成为许多大型医院围手术期护理的重要组成部分。随着术前诊所的普及持续增加,以及围手术期医学领域的发展,呼吸治疗师(RTs)将不可避免地在参与术前患者优化以减轻肺部并发症方面发挥越来越重要的作用。
通过PubMed在Medline数据库上对围手术期肺部并发症进行关键词搜索,共识别出2000多篇候选文章以供审查。若文章仅为英文且包含以下一个或多个搜索词,则将其纳入:肺部并发症、术后并发症、术后肺部并发症(PPCs)、术前康复、激励肺活量测定、戒烟、无创通气。优先选择荟萃分析、随机对照试验和系统评价。过去二十年内的出版物在最终纳入时更受青睐。作者在多年的小组会议上讨论了符合条件的文章,以评估数据的相关性和质量,从而将符合条件的文章范围缩小至最终选定用于审查的出版物。
以下叙述性综述探讨了预防PPCs的术前优化策略,并强调了RTs可能发挥关键作用的领域。在审视了定义PPCs的挑战后,该综述考察了可用于预测PPCs的关键风险模型及其对后续关于RTs在多学科团队中可能协助的预防措施讨论的影响。
RTs可以通过协助围手术期的其他临床医生为患有基础疾病的患者提供呼吸护理,来减轻PPCs的医疗负担。虽然我们的综述大部分集中在既往存在的肺部疾病以及这些疾病的药物和非药物优化方面,但还有其他导致PPCs的因素值得未来探索。