Parker S D, Breslow M J, Frank S M, Rosenfeld B A, Norris E J, Christopherson R, Rock P, Gottlieb S O, Raff H, Perler B A
Department of Anesthesiology/Critical Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Crit Care Med. 1995 Dec;23(12):1954-61. doi: 10.1097/00003246-199512000-00003.
To determine whether catecholamine and cortisol secretory responses to surgery contribute to postoperative complications.
Prospective, randomized, case series.
A university hospital operating suite and surgical intensive care unit.
Sixty patients undergoing lower extremity vascular surgery.
Patients were randomized to receive either epidural anesthesia/epidural opiate analgesia (regional anesthesia) or general anesthesia/intravenous patient-controlled analgesia (general anesthesia).
Anesthesia was managed according to a prospectively designed protocol. Hemodynamic parameters and plasma catecholamine concentrations were determined at specific intraoperative and postoperative time points. Intraoperative and postoperative urine samples were collected and analyzed for free cortisol concentrations. Outcomes evaluated were cardiac (nonfatal myocardial infarction and cardiac death) and surgical (graft occlusion). Mean arterial pressure during emergence from anesthesia and in the early postoperative period correlated positively with plasma norepinephrine concentration (p < .01). In addition, plasma catecholamine concentrations were higher in patients with postoperative hypertension. Plasma norepinephrine concentrations at the time of emergence from anesthesia and postoperatively were also higher in patients requiring repeat surgery for graft revision, thrombectomy, or amputation (p < .05). Multivariate analysis indicated that the norepinephrine concentration at the time of emergence, but not type of anesthesia, correlated with reoperation for graft occlusion, suggesting that the previously reported beneficial effect of regional anesthesia may be due to modulation of the stress response. Myocardial infarction or cardiac death occurred in three patients. These patients had markedly increased catecholamine concentrations.
The catecholamine response to lower extremity vascular surgery contributes to the development of postoperative hypertension and may also be important in the development of thrombotic complications.
确定儿茶酚胺和皮质醇对手术的分泌反应是否会导致术后并发症。
前瞻性、随机、病例系列研究。
大学医院手术室和外科重症监护病房。
60例行下肢血管手术的患者。
患者随机接受硬膜外麻醉/硬膜外阿片类镇痛(区域麻醉)或全身麻醉/静脉自控镇痛(全身麻醉)。
根据前瞻性设计的方案管理麻醉。在特定的术中和术后时间点测定血流动力学参数和血浆儿茶酚胺浓度。收集术中和术后尿样并分析游离皮质醇浓度。评估的结局包括心脏方面(非致命性心肌梗死和心源性死亡)和手术方面(移植物闭塞)。麻醉苏醒期和术后早期的平均动脉压与血浆去甲肾上腺素浓度呈正相关(p <.01)。此外,术后高血压患者的血浆儿茶酚胺浓度更高。因移植物修复、血栓切除术或截肢而需要再次手术的患者,麻醉苏醒时和术后的血浆去甲肾上腺素浓度也更高(p <.05)。多变量分析表明,麻醉苏醒时的去甲肾上腺素浓度而非麻醉类型与移植物闭塞的再次手术相关,这表明先前报道的区域麻醉的有益效果可能归因于对应激反应的调节。3例患者发生心肌梗死或心源性死亡。这些患者的儿茶酚胺浓度显著升高。
下肢血管手术的儿茶酚胺反应会导致术后高血压的发生,在血栓形成并发症的发生中可能也很重要。