阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)患者阿片类药物减肥手术后的呼吸监测

Surgeries Pub Date : 2023-01-11 DOI:10.3390/surgeries4010004
Mark Ambert, Nikhil C. Reddy, G. Melloni, Maha Balouch, J. Sujka, A. Mooney, C. DuCoin, E. Camporesi
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Results: Of the 80 patients evaluated (18 male), 56 had obstructive sleep apnea and were using CPAP at home (OSA); 24 did not. OSA patients received CPAP via an oronasal mask or a nasal pillow pressure support immediately after arriving in PACU, utilizing their at-home settings. We encountered 115 respiratory depression events across 48 patients. The most frequent respiratory event recorded was a transient desaturation (as low as 85%), which usually lasted 20–30 sec and resolved spontaneously in 3 to 5 min; most episodes followed small boluses of IV opioid analgesia administered during recovery, on demand. All episodes resolved spontaneously without any nursing or medical intervention. OSA patients had significantly more events than non-OSA patients (1.84 (1.78–1.9) mean events vs. 0.50 (0.43–0.57) for non-OSA, p = 0.0002). 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引用次数: 1

摘要

目的介绍:术后呼吸抑制可使患者术后恢复复杂化。最近提出了一种预测评分(PRODIGY)来评估阿片类药物引起的术后呼吸抑制的风险。我们首次将该评分应用于接受减肥手术的患者队列,按阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)状态分层。此外,我们记录了持续的术后血管造影来评估呼吸抑制和呼吸暂停发作(respiratory Events, RE)。材料和方法:本研究由我们的IRB批准,包括机器人减肥手术后恢复(PACU)期间呼吸变量的连续监测。我们使用连续血氧仪和脉搏血氧仪(Capnostream 35, Medtronic Inc.和Profox呼吸血氧仪软件)。术前准备包括对所有肥胖患者进行OSA评估,对严重OSA等级进行额外的睡眠研究,并使用已公布的PRODIGY评分评估呼吸抑制风险(低、中、高)。此外,我们通过OSA状态评估患者。所有患者均接受来自同一小组的多模式术中非阿片类麻醉。术后所有患者均接受PACU连续呼吸监测(平均持续时间超过140 min)。呼吸抑制事件使用修订后的五种标准公布类别进行评分。事件的测量是根据由研究患者组中不公开的观察者对汇编的呼吸变量的连续记录追踪的分析。结果:80例患者(18例男性)中,56例患有阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停,并在家中使用CPAP (OSA);24人没有。OSA患者在到达PACU后立即通过口鼻面罩或鼻枕压力支持接受CPAP,利用他们的家庭设置。我们在48例患者中遇到115例呼吸抑制事件。最常见的呼吸事件记录是短暂性去饱和(低至85%),通常持续20-30秒,并在3 - 5分钟内自行消退;大多数发作是在恢复期间根据需要给予小剂量静脉阿片类镇痛药。所有发作均自行消退,无需任何护理或医疗干预。OSA患者的平均事件数明显多于非OSA患者(平均事件数1.84 (1.78-1.9)vs.非OSA患者0.50 (0.43-0.57),p = 0.0002)。相反,当我们将PRODIGY评分水平(低、中、高)作为连续变量(p = 0.39)或分类变量(高vs低,p = 0.65,中vs低,p = 0.17)时,PRODIGY评分水平(低、中、高或高)并不能预测事件的数量。结论:我们将这些新结果归因于无阿片类药物麻醉、早期CPAP使用和PACU入院时平视体位,显示缺乏需要干预的呼吸事件。此外,所有患者术后麻醉需求均较轻。最后,我们患者的PRODIGY评分升高并不能充分预测呼吸事件,但OSA状态本身可以。摘要:我们调查了阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停患者(56例)术后呼吸事件(RE)的发生率,并将其与无OSA的同类患者(24例)进行了比较。所有患者都接受了相同的机器人辅助手术和低剂量或无剂量的麻醉。使用标准公布的PRODIGY评分对患者进行预筛选,并在PACU到达后使用连续血氧仪和血糖仪进行监测(Capnostream 35和Profox分析)。OSA患者的RE高于非OSA患者(1.8 vs. 0.5, p = - 0.0002)。然而,PRODIGY评分较高的患者并不比评分较低的患者发生更频繁的RE。我们将这些新结果归因于在PACU入院时不使用阿片类药物的麻醉/镇痛和立即使用CPAP。
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Respiratory Monitoring after Opioid-Sparing Bariatric Surgery in Patients with Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA)
Introduction with Aim: Postoperative respiratory depression can complicate a patient’s recovery after surgery. A predictive score (PRODIGY) was recently proposed to evaluate the risk of opioid-induced postoperative respiratory depression. For the first time, we applied this score to a cohort of patients receiving bariatric surgery, stratified by Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) status. In addition, we recorded continuous postoperative capnography to evaluate respiratory depression and apnea episodes (Respiratory Events, RE). Materials and Methods: The present study was approved by our IRB and comprised continuous surveillance of respiratory variables during postoperative recovery (in PACU) after robotic bariatric surgery. We utilized continuous capnography and pulse oximetry (Capnostream 35, Medtronic Inc., and Profox Respiratory Oximetry software). Preoperative preparation included OSA evaluation for all bariatric patients, additional sleep studies for severe OSA grades, and evaluation of risk for respiratory depression (low, intermediate, or high) using the published PRODIGY score. In addition, we evaluated patients by OSA status. All patients received multimodal intraoperative non-opioid anesthesia from the same team. After surgery, all patients received continuous respiratory surveillance in PACU (average duration exceeding 140 min). Respiratory depression events were scored using a modified list of the five standard published categories. Events were measured according to analysis of continuously recorded tracing of the compiled respiratory variables by observers kept blind from the study patient’s group. Results: Of the 80 patients evaluated (18 male), 56 had obstructive sleep apnea and were using CPAP at home (OSA); 24 did not. OSA patients received CPAP via an oronasal mask or a nasal pillow pressure support immediately after arriving in PACU, utilizing their at-home settings. We encountered 115 respiratory depression events across 48 patients. The most frequent respiratory event recorded was a transient desaturation (as low as 85%), which usually lasted 20–30 sec and resolved spontaneously in 3 to 5 min; most episodes followed small boluses of IV opioid analgesia administered during recovery, on demand. All episodes resolved spontaneously without any nursing or medical intervention. OSA patients had significantly more events than non-OSA patients (1.84 (1.78–1.9) mean events vs. 0.50 (0.43–0.57) for non-OSA, p = 0.0002). The level of PRODIGY score (low, intermediate, or high), instead, was not predictive of the number of events when we treated this variable as continuous (p = 0.39) or categorical (high vs. low, p = 0.65, and intermediate vs. low, p = 0.17). Conclusions: We attribute these novel results, showing a lack of respiratory events requiring intervention, to opioid-free anesthesia, early CPAP utilization, and head-up positioning on admission to PACU. Furthermore, all these patients had light postoperative narcotic requirements. Finally, an elevated PRODIGY score in our patients did not sufficiently predict respiratory events, but OSA status alone did. Key Points Summary: We investigated the incidence of Respiratory Events (RE) in Obstructive Sleep Apnea patients after surgery (56 patients) and compared them to similar patients without OSA (24 patients). All patients received identical robotic-assisted surgery and low- or no-opiate anesthesia. Patients were pre-screened with the standard published PRODIGY scores and were monitored after PACU arrival with continuous oximetry and capnography (Capnostream 35 and Profox analysis). OSA patients showed more RE than non-OSA (1.8 vs. 0.5, p = −0.0002). However, patients with elevated PRODIGY scores did not develop more frequent RE compared to patients with low scores. We attribute these novel results to opioid-sparing anesthesia/analgesia and immediate CPAP utilization on admission to PACU.
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