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Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia Dr. Subbiah Chelliah MBBS, DA (UK), FRCA (UK), DESA (Sweden) Consultant Anaesthesiologist, Kovai Medical Centre & Hospitals, Coimbatore

Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

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Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia. Dr. Subbiah Chelliah MBBS, DA ( UK ), FRCA ( UK ), DESA ( Sweden ) Consultant Anaesthesiologist, Kovai Medical Centre & Hospitals, Coimbatore. Awareness during Anaesthesia. Awareness: Definition Brief history Incidence - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Dr. Subbiah Chelliah MBBS, DA (UK), FRCA (UK), DESA (Sweden)

Consultant Anaesthesiologist,

Kovai Medical Centre & Hospitals, Coimbatore

Page 2: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Awareness during Anaesthesia• Awareness:

– Definition– Brief history– Incidence– Causes– Associations– Stages

• Prevention: – Detecting Awareness– Preventing Awareness

• Consequences of intra-op awareness– PTSD– Public awareness – Dealing with patients who complain of awareness during anaesthesia– Medico legal aspects

Page 3: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Definition

• Awareness is the conscious experiencing of an event at the time that it occurs. (Guerra 1986)

• Recall denotes the retention of an event in memory after it has occurred. (Guerra 1986)

Page 4: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

1895

• Horace Wells attempted to demonstrate N2O to physicians at MGH, Boston

• Patient moved & cried out!

• Surgeons considered the demonstration a failure

• Patient had no recall of his operation

Page 5: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

1896

• W.T.G. Morton demonstrated the use of Ether in the same venue

• Patient did not move

• Surgeons considered it a ground breaking success!

• Morton’s patient Gilbert Abbot, reported that he had been aware during his surgery, while experiencing no pain

Page 6: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

1943

• Muscle relaxants came into clinical use

• Anaesthetists started giving lesser amount of anaesthetic agents

Page 7: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Levinson study (1965)

• 10 pts undergoing dental extraction with ether; shortly after induction, the anaesthetist called to the surgeon ‘STOP THE OPERATION, I don’t like the patient’s color. His/her lips are turning too blue. I am going to give a little oxygen!’

• One month later, probed for assimilation of crisis by hypnosis

• 4/10 patients were able to quote verbatin the words spoken by the anaesthetist; 4 more showed evidence of having registered the event, in the form of emotional distress

Page 8: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Levinson study

• Obvious methodological flaws: no controls, non-randomisation, absence of double blind study, asking leading questions

• Thirty years later, Levinson repeated this study but failed to replicate his original findings!

Page 9: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia
Page 10: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

General Anaesthesia is not an all or nothing phenomenon!

Page 11: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Incidence of Awareness

Reported incidence of awareness varies and is difficult to determine

• Swedish study: 0.06%• American academic centres: 0.13%

• Overall incidence: ~0.2%• Conscious awareness with pain: 1 in 20,000 –

40,000 anaesthetics

Page 12: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Incidence of Awareness

• Cardiac surgery: 1 – 1.5%

• Trauma surgery: 11 – 43%

• Cesarian section: 0.4%

Page 13: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Causes

• Lack of complete understanding of kinetics & dynamics of drugs

• Induction of anaesthesia: – Coughing – difficult intubation

Page 14: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Causes / Associations

Patient factors:

– Limited cardiac reserve (ASA IV & V)– On going blood loss / hypotension– Patients on beta blockers, Calcium channel blockers– Drug / alcohol abusers / addicts– Patients on regular opiates /sedative medications

Page 15: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Associations

• Opioid based anaesthesia / Neuroleptanaesthesia

• Regional anaesthesia & ‘Light’ GA

• Muscle relaxants

• Disconnection / empty vaporiser

• Caesarian section, Trauma, Cardiac bypass

Page 16: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Stages of Awareness

Stage 1: Conscious awareness with explicit memory

Stage 2: Conscious awareness without explicit memory

Stage 3: Subconscious awareness with implicit memory

Stage 4: No awareness

Page 17: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Awareness with explicit memory

• Nearly always associated with neuromuscular blocking drug use

• May or may not be associated with pain

• ‘State of awful helplessness’

• Patients can go on to develop severe unexplained psychiatric disorder

Page 18: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Awareness without explicit memory

• Tunstall: 9/12 pts showed arm movements during procedure (IFT) 4/9 appropriately – none recalled

• Russell: 61% were able to move arm to command (given thio/dtc/nitous/oxygen) – none recalled

• Changes in BP, pulse, sweating & tears were shown to be poor indicators of awareness

Page 19: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Awareness without explicit memory

• 80% of patients induced with Midazolam & fentanyl and 70% induced with Midazolam & Alfentanil showed hand movement

• While breathing low doses of Isoflurane (<0.4% ET) subjects were able to comprehend and respond to words

Page 20: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Subconscious awareness with implicit memory

• Increasing anaesthetic concentration leads to reduction in working memory, then loss of conciousness and explicit memory, whereas implicit memory of intraop events may remain!!

• Indirect tests of memory must be used to demonstrate evidence of implicit memory & learning

Page 21: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Subconscious awareness with implicit memory

• Category generation, free association, stem completion tests are used

• Conflicting study results

• Positive suggestions intraop: stop smoking, faster recovery

Page 22: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Preventing Awareness

• ‘High’ risk patients / situations

• Detecting / Monitoring anaesthetic depth intraop

• Drugs

• Avoiding certain anaesthetic techniques

• Patient information

Page 23: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Detection of Awareness

• Clinical signs• Clinical experience• IFT• Lower oesophageal contractility• Frontalis EMG• Respiratory sinus arrhythmia• EEG

– Raw EEG– Processed EEG

• BiS• AEP

Page 24: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

PRST Score

Page 25: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Isolated Forearm Technique (IFT)

• First used by Tunstall• Isolate forearm with BP cuff before giving NMB• Patients asked to squeeze hand for ‘Yes’• Limitations: time; surgery on the hand

• Even when patients responded, rarely did they have any memory of this after the operation

Page 26: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Monitoring Awareness…

• Clinical experience

• Lower oesophageal contractility

• Frontalis EMG

• Heart rate variability (Respiratory sinus arrhythmia)

Page 27: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

EEG

Page 28: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

BiS (BiSpectral index monitoring)

• Complex EEG parameter under development by Aspect Medical systems since 1985 using clinical data from 1500 anaesthetic regimes and 500hrs of EEG signals gathered under anaesthetics

• Approved by the FDA in 1996

• Several hundred publications to date

Page 29: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

BiS

• Direct measure of the effects of anaesthetics on the brain

• BIS monitoring allows anaesthesia providers to administer the appropriate amount of drug that each patient needs

Page 30: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

The Bispectral IndexTM (BiS) Aspect Medical Systems

Page 31: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia
Page 32: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Auditory Evoked PotentialAuditory Evoked Potential

Page 33: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

The early cortical AEP waves called Pa and Nb, which occurs between 20 and 80 ms reflects the activity in the temporal lobe/primary auditory cortex ( the site of sound registration)

Changes in the latency of these waves ( in particular the Nb wave) are highly correlated with a transition from awake to loss of consciousness

Page 34: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Mid-latency AEP

Page 35: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia
Page 36: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

AEP

• Limitations: hearing impaired; head & neck surgery

Page 37: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Other processed EEG monitors

• Narcotrend Index

• Cerebral state index (CSI)

• Entropy

• Snap index

Page 38: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Preventing Awareness

Page 39: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Preventing Awareness

Page 40: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Dealing with patients who have a history of Awareness during Anaesthesia

• Take patient seriously• Investigate previous anaesthetic technique &

circumstances• Comorbidity / medications• Reassure• Sedative premed• Intraop ET agent monitoring / BiS• Postop visit• Good Periop records

Page 41: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia
Page 42: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Consequences of unintended awareness during Anaesthesia

• Fear of Anaesthesia• Post Traumatic Stress disorder• Flashbacks, Anxiety, sustained emotional effects

• Anger / litigation

• Paranoia / loss of confidence / financial loss - Anaesthesiologist

Page 43: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia
Page 44: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

• Awake, a 2007 film about anaesthetic awareness

• Anaesthesia, an award-winning horror film about anaesthesia awareness

• Return, a Korean thriller movie about anaesthesia awareness

• In an episode of Nip/Tuck a woman experiences anaesthesia awareness while having surgery to repair scarring on her face.

• Wide Awake, a Korean horror/thriller movie was mainly about the outcomes mentally after anaesthesia awareness.

Page 45: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Patient associations / support groups

Page 46: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Dealing with patient who complaints of Awareness during Anaesthesia

• Don’t trivialise the problem – take patient’s complaint seriously

• Visit patient as soon as possible, along with a witness

• Detailed history – modified Brice interview

Page 47: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Modified Brice Interview

1. What is the last thing you remember before surgery?

2. What is the first thing you remember after surgery?

3. Do you remember anything happening during surgery?

4. Did you have any dreams during surgery?

5. What is the worst thing about your surgery?

Page 48: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Dealing with patient who complaints of Awareness during Anaesthesia

• Document patient’s exact memory• Attempt to confirm validity of account• Patient anaesthetic records / theatre

circumstances• Try to determine cause• Reassure / offer explanation / document• Keep a copy of records• Offer psychological support

• Notify medical defence / hospital admin / patient’s GP

Page 49: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

Medico legal aspects(American closed claims database: 1971 - 2001)

• Small fraction of patients initiate legal action

• Most of them are women (>70%)

• Cases of intraop awareness with explicit recall are difficult to defend

• Awards to patients for awareness with recall range from $1000 - $800,000

Page 50: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia
Page 51: Preventing and Managing the impact of Awareness during Anaesthesia

"Awareness with analgesia is regrettable; awareness with pain is

unforgivable"

Thank you!