Cardiovascular Disease
- An estimated _______(1) American adults (1:3) have one or more types of cardiovascular disease
- _______(2) are > 65 years old
- Estimated _______(3) inpatient cardiovascular operations performed in the U.S.
- Data indicate that the lifetime risk for CVD after age 40 is _______(4) men and _______(5) women
- CVD kills twice as many women as _______(6) does!
- _______(7) > Caucasians
- Biologic systems and mechanistic pathways genetically associated with _______(8) adverse events
Answers:
Patient Assessment
- The anesthetic evaluation includes the cardiac history, particularly the cath report, thallium stress test, echo, and _______(1).
- Critical information includes left main disease or equivalent, poor distal targets, ejection fraction, _______(2), presence of aneurysm, pulmonary hypertension, valvular lesions, and congenital lesions.
- Ask your patient, “How is your angina manifested?” If a patient’s angina is experienced as shortness of breath, or nausea, or _______(3), you need to be able to link that symptom to possible myocardial ischemia.
- Limit the things that cause angina such as _______(4)
- Does the EKG reveal _______(5), conduction abnormalities?
- Concerns re: Cath report include an _______(6) > 18 mm Hg, EF < 4 or a CI < 2.0 L/min/m^2
- _______(7)
- Does the CXR reveal cardiomegaly, pulmonary congestion, pulmonary edema, pleural effusion and “Kerley B” lines (thin, linear pulmonary opacities caused by fluid or cellular infiltration into the interstitium of the lungs).
Answers:
1. ECG
2. LVEDP
3. heartburn
4. self-moving to OR table
5. ischemia/infarct
6. LVEDP
7. Patient is coming in compromised
HTN
- DM
- CIGARETTE SMOKING – determine whether pulmonary HTN is due to primarily pulmonary or cardiac factors
◦ Are they even a good candidate for this procedure if they are still _______(1)?
CAROTID ARTERY DISEASE – may require higher systemic arterial pressures
- RENAL DYSFUNCTION – pre-existing renal insufficiency is the most common cause of postoperative renal failure
- Does the past medical history include COPD, TIA, stroke, cerebral vascular disease, renal disease (CRI is an _______(2) risk factor), and/or hepatic insufficiency.
- Is the COPD being treated?
- Does the patient have allergies?
- Has the patient previously received protamine during vascular or cardiac surgery? (Why is this _______(3)?)
Answers:
1. smoking
2. independent
3. important
Findings Suggestive of Ventricular Dysfunction
Patient Assessment - Blockers
Answers:
1. anginal
2. continue
3. continue
Physical Assessment
Answers:
1. ascites
a. LBBB
2. effect
3. affect
4. fast
5. elevated LVEDP
6. decreased compliance
7. MVP prolapse
8. cardiomegaly
9. hypertrophy
Patient Assessment
Patient Interview
Answers:
1. pressure
2. more severe
3. liver
4. edema
5. deficits
6. death
Pre-op Medications
Monitoring
Answers:
a. 40%
b. lighter
c. Severe aortic stenosis
1. avoided
d. Pulse oximeter
2. barash
e. II, III and aVF
3. circ
EKG Lead Placement
Monitoring
Arterial Line
Answers:
a. radial
1. femoral
b. left
c. right
2. lower
3. error
4. errors
CVP and PAC
PA catheters
Answers:
a. TEE
1. central line
2. CABG
3. IMAs (Internal Mammary Arteries)
PA Catheters
PAC placement is most commonly performed by observing the pressure waves as the catheter is floated from the CVP position through the right heart chambers and into the pulmonary artery.
Answers:
1. LBBB (Left Bundle Branch Block)
The anatomic position of a PAC in the PA. The dashed line positions the inflated balloon in the “wedged” position. PA, _______(1); Alv, _______(2); PCap, _______(3); PV, _______(4); I, II, and III characterize the relationship of _______(5) and _______(6) as described by West. (The bottom of the figure shows a _______(7) correlation of vascular pressures.)
The normal central venous pressure (CVP) trace. _______(8), electrocardiogram.
Answers:
1. pulmonary artery
2. alveolus
3. pulmonary capillary
4. pulmonary vein
5. P_alveolar
6. P_arterial and P_venous
7. progressive
8. ECG
CVP and EKG Waves
- P wave – depolarization of _______(1).
- QRS complex – depolarization of _______(2).
- T wave – repolarization of _______(3).
- A wave – atrial _______(4).
- C wave – tricuspid valve elevation into _______(5).
- X wave – downward movement of contracting right _______(6).
- V wave – back pressure wave from blood filling right _______(7).
- Y wave – ______(a) valve opens in early ventricular _______(8).
CVP Waveforms
- Atrial Fibrillation — _______(9) waves absent.
- Resistance to RA emptying — large _______(10) waves due to:
- Tricuspid Stenosis
- RV hypertrophy
- Pulmonary HTN
- Low RV compliance
- Large or prominent v waves due to:
- ______(b) regurgitation
- RV ischemia or failure
- Constrictive pericarditis or cardiac tamponade
- RV papillary muscle ischemia & TR
Answers:
1. atria
2. ventricles
3. ventricles
4. contraction
5. RA (Right Atrium)
6. ventricle
7. atrium
a. tricuspid
8. diastole
9. a
10. a
b. Tricuspid
Mixed Venous Oximetry → Oximetric PAC
- Reflected intensity of light identifies the saturation of blood surrounding the tip of the PAC.
- ______(a) – total tissue O2 balance
- Ability to continuously monitor balance between O2 delivery and consumption.
- Normal is _______(1)% (denotes tissue extraction).
Low SVO2
- decreased CO
- increased oxygen consumption
- ______(b) arterial oxygen saturation
- ______(c) hemoglobin (Hb) concentration
Continuous Cardiac Output
- Microcomputer continuously computes CO based on changes in blood temperature
- Potential to identify acute changes in ventricular function
Answers:
a, SVO2
1. 75
b. decreased.
c. decreased.
This SVO2 recording in a post-CABG demonstrates the effects of shivering and its treatment, and the relationship between SVO2, cardiac output (CO), and metabolic rate (SvO2).
*______(a), a long acting muscle relaxant, used to eliminate shivering and improve SvO2.
Cardiopulmonary Bypass Machine (CBM)
- Extracorporeal circulation or _______(1) machine.
- Device does the work of the heart and lungs when the heart is stopped for a _______(2).
- Operated by _______(3).
Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO)
- Initially used to describe long-term extracorporeal support that focused on the function of _______(4).
- In some patients, the emphasis shifted to _______(5) removal, and the term extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal was coined.
- Extracorporeal support was later used for postoperative support in patients following _______(6). Other variations of its capabilities include treatment of PPHN.
- With all of these uses for extracorporeal circuitry, a new term, extracorporeal life support (ECLS), has come into _______(7) to describe this technology.
Answers:
a. Pancuronium
1. heart-lung
2. surgical procedure
3. Perfusionists
4. oxygenation
5. carbon dioxide
6. cardiac surgery
7. vogue
CNS Dysfunction
- Etiology believed predominantly due to emboli
- Air
- Atheroma
- Particulates
- Incidence of CVA S/P CABG (__________(1))
- 1% < 64 years old
- 5 to 9% >65 years old
- _________(2) subtle cognitive deficits (microemboli)
- Improves over initial 2 to 6 months
- _________(3) have residual impairment
- Risk Factors
- advanced age (>__________(4))
- preexisting cerebrovascular disease
- e.g., carotid artery stenosis
- Should check for carotid U/S
- history of prior CVA
- PVD
- ascending aortic atheroma
- diabetes
- duration of CPB
- intracardiac procedure
- (e.g., valve replacement)
- excessive warming during and following CPB
- perfusion during CPB
- Difficult to monitor during CPB & no standard criteria
- Cerebral protection is limited
- Hypothermia
- _________(5) cerebral metabolic rate
- prolongs ischemic tolerance
- Nagelhout
- Hepatic BF and enzymatic activity are reduced — reduced clearance of drugs
- Myocardial protection is enhanced
- CNS is protected
Resume normothermia towards the end of bypass prior to unclamping.
- Increased risk of CNS dysfunction when:
- ______(6)
- during ______(7)
- ______(8) ventricular ejection
Answers:
1. macroemboli
2. 60-70%
3. 13 to 39%
4. 70 years
5. ↓ (decreased)
6. Unclamping
7. rewarming
8. initial
BIS Monitoring
- Falsely ______(a) BIS values during cardiac surgery
- Barash: Targeting an end-tidal concentration of the inhaled agent between _______(1) and _______(2) MAC is as effective as maintaining a BIS value between _______(3) and _______(4).
- Attributed to interference from:
- _______(5) head rotation
- _______(6)
- _______(7)
Answers:
a. high
1. 0.7
2. 1.3
3. 40
4. 60
5. pump
6. pacemakers
7. hypothermia
Anesthesia Technique
- It has not been demonstrated that one form of anesthesia is obviously better than any other with one exception:
- ______(a) inductions have been demonstrated to cause pulmonary hypertension and myocardial ischemia.
- ______(b) is the only anesthetic not recommended for patients with known coronary disease.
- There is also ______(c) (MS 1 mg subarachnoid) but safety data for this technique is limited.
- Thoracic Epidural Anesthesia (TEA) is successfully used in other countries to include India.
- No one “ideal” anesthetic for patients with CAD
- extent of pre-existing myocardial dysfunction
- pharmacologic properties of the drugs
- Barash:
- Opioids — lacks myocardial depression, stable HD state, and reduces HR
- Sufentanil and remifentanil — rapid extubation
- New research morphine is cardioprotective and _______(1)
- VA
- Which VA is the most potent coronary vasodilator? Isoflurane
- Desflurane and sevoflurane have the fastest recovery of all volatile anesthetics
- increase in sympathetic activity and myocardial ischemia in patients anesthetized with desflurane as the sole anesthetic agent
- Nitrates
- Nitroglycerin (TNG) is the drug of choice for the treatment of _______(2).
- Angina only on heavy exertion & good LV function
- Benefit of ↓ MVO2 (myocardial oxygen consumption) with volatile-based technique
- Severe CHF
- Choose technique with less myocardial depressant effect
- Avoid precipitating overt heart failure
- Factors to consider
- degree of ventricular dysfunction
- difficult airway
- length of surgery (“fast track”)
Answers:
a. Desflurane
b. Desflurane
c. high dose spinal narcotic
1. anti-inflammatory
2. acute myocardial ischemia
CVOR Set-up
- Arrive extra early. Help the anesthesia technician set-up the room.
- Standard room set up for GA to include a non-depolarizing muscle relaxant, atropine, _______(1), ephedrine, norepinephrine (syringe and infusion ready), dopamine (infusion ready), calcium chloride, heparin (30,000 units drawn up, probably more), lidocaine and epinephrine.
- Anesthesia machine (Routine machine check).
- Airway
- Difficult airway anticipated? Gather special equipment
- Circulatory access
- Catheters for peripheral and central intravenous and arterial access
- Intravenous _______(2) and infusion tubing and pumps
- Fluid warmer with high volume tubing available
- Patient preparation includes at least one large bore IV.
- Place the a-line at the ______(a) radial artery since the left side will be occluded by the retractor for the IMA
- Right IJ _______(3) (or single lumen internal catheter, ‘SLIC,’ pronounced ‘slick’) and PA catheter.
- Five-lead _______(4)
Answers:
1. glycopyrrolate
2. fluids
a. right
3. chords
4. ECG
CVOR Set-up
- Arrive extra early. Help the anesthesia technician set-up the room.
- Standard room set up for GA to include a non-depolarizing muscle relaxant, atropine, glycopyrrolate, ephedrine, neosynephrine (syringe and infusion ready), dopamine (infusion ready), calcium chloride, heparin (30,000 units drawn up, probably more), lidocaine and epinephrine.
- Anesthesia machine (Routine machine check).
- Airway
- Difficult airway anticipated? Gather special equipment
- Circulatory access
- Catheters for peripheral and central intravenous and arterial access
- Intravenous _______(1) and infusion tubing and pumps
- Fluid warmer with high volume tubing available
- Patient preparation includes at least one large bore IV.
- Place the a-line at the ______(a) radial artery since the left side will be occluded by the retractor for the IMA
- Right IJ _______(2) (or single lumen internal catheter, ‘SLIC,’ pronounced ‘slick’) and PA catheter.
- Five-lead _______(3)
CVOR Set-up cont.
- The surgeons can cause profound ______(b) with cardiac manipulation.
- If the pressure suddenly drops or PVC’s develop, look at what they are doing before you give a drug to treat episodic hypotension.
- If you give a drug because of hypotension caused by the surgeons and then they let go of the heart, the pressure will sky rocket.
- You may need to hand ventilate during some parts of the dissection.
Pre-induction measurements:
- If you put a PA catheter in prior to induction, you have indicated that you need it for patient management.
- You should therefore measure and record SAP, HR, CVP, PAP, PAO, and CO prior to anesthetic induction.
- You can _______(4) the patient during this time and free up one hand by using the mask strap to hold the mask in place.
Answers:
1. fluids
a. right
2. chords
3. ECG
b. hypotension
4. denitrogenate
Pre-induction measurements:
- If you put a PA catheter in prior to induction, you have indicated that you need it for patient management.
- You should therefore measure and record SAP, HR, CVP, PAP, PAO, and CO prior to anesthetic induction.
- You can _______(1) the patient during this time and free up one hand by using the mask strap to hold the mask in place.
Pre-bypass hemodynamics:
- Maintain the blood pressure within _______(2) of baseline ward pressure.
- Heart rates between _______(3) limit myocardial oxygen consumption demand.
Bypass hemodynamics:
- Maintain the MAP between _______(4) during the cold period of bypass (cross clamp on) and between _______(5) during warm bypass (cross clamp off).
- Exceptions include patients with carotid vascular disease or chronic renal insufficiency who may need _______(6) pressures (60-80 mmHg) for the entire pump run.
Answers:
Post-bypass hemodynamics:
- SBP >______(a) mmHg is fine.
- Between 100 and 120 mmHg, everyone will be happy.
- If it is greater than 120 mmHg, the patient is hypertensive and there will be more _______(1).
- Cardiac index 2.0-2.5 L/min
- PA Diastolic < 15 mmHg
- CVP < 5 mmHg.
- If CVP is ever greater than PA-D there is a problem.
- Consider poor calibration or _______(2).
Ischemia:
- Patients have CABG surgery because of myocardial ischemia.
- 40% of patients undergoing CABG surgery have intraoperative episodes of myocardial ischemia.
- Record a 5 lead ECG prior to induction for a _______(3) comparison.
- When the blood flow to myocardium is insufficient, it immediately stops contracting. This process takes 5 to 10 seconds. At 60 to 90 seconds, the ______(b) wave starts to change.
- As revascularization changes, _______(4) may improve
Induction and Intubation:
- Never induce the patient without a surgeon who can put the patient on bypass in the room.
- Never induce without a perfusionist and a pump. They should be able to place the patient on bypass in less than 5 minutes if the patient arrests on induction.
- Take care to avoid hypotension and _______(5).
Answers:
a. 80
1. bleeding
2. right ventricular failure
3. baseline
b. ECG ST-T
4. cardiac tissue
5. hypoxia
Baseline ACT and ABG:
- Obtain as soon as possible after induction.
- Remember, the ACT is measured in seconds. Therefore, an ACT of 450 will take _______(1) to result.
- ABGs are typically run via I-Stat and cartridges.
Sternotomy:
- You will let the lungs _______(2) during opening.
- You must disconnect the patient from the ventilator and reconnect after they open the sternum.
- Develop a system to prevent yourself from forgetting to _______(3).
- Do not rely on the alarm as the only reminder.
- Apex:
- _______(4) is most common during this section of surgery in CPBs
Answers:
1. 7.5 minutes
2. deflate
3. place patient back on ventilator
4. Awareness
Baseline ACT and ABG:
- Obtain as soon as possible after induction.
- Remember, the ACT is measured in seconds. Therefore, an ACT of 450 will take _______(1) to result.
- ABGs are typically run via I-Stat and cartridges.
Sternotomy:
- You will let the lungs _______(2) during opening.
- You must disconnect the patient from the ventilator and reconnect after they open the sternum.
- Develop a system to prevent yourself from forgetting to _______(3).
- Do not rely on the alarm as the only reminder.
- Apex:
- _______(4) is most common during this section of surgery in CPBs
IMA dissection:
- The surgeon may want the table tilted to the left and elevated.
- The surgeon may want the tidal volumes _______(5) (and, therefore, you will _______(6) the rate to maintain minute volume) to facilitate the dissection.
Heparinization:
- Do not allow the surgeons to go on bypass without heparinization. If the patient is not heparinized when the clamp is ______(a) on the bypass pump, the pump and oxygenator will clot and the patient will most likely die.
- If the surgeons are placing a cannula in an artery, ask if they want the heparin given. When they ask for heparin, respond with a verbal statement – “heparin has been given.”
- Always use the ______(b) for heparin. Aspirate blood from the line before and after the heparin dose to check to make sure the IV is _______(7).
- Check the ACT a minute or two after the dose.
- Apex:
- ACT should be > _______(8) secs
- Heparin allergy or heparin-induced thrombocytopenia requires alternatives (bivalirudin, hirudin, factor X inhibitor)
- Do not use the same IV to draw the blood that you infused the _______(9).
- Draw an arterial blood sample.
Answers:
1. 7.5 minutes
2. deflate
3. place patient back on ventilator
4. Awareness
5. reduced
6. increase
a. opened
b. central line
7. patent
8. 400
9. heparin
Placing the cannulas:
- Monitor TOF and administer a NDMB prior to cannula placement.
- If the patient takes a breath with the atrium ______(a), they can develop a gas emboli and suffer severe injury.
- The small cannula in the aorta should not have any bubbles in it.
- If you see a bubble, tell the surgeons immediately.
- When they put in the aortic cannula there is _______(1); wear eye protection.
HADDSUE – or going on bypass.
- H — ______(b): Always give prior to bypass.
- A — _______(2): Always check before going on bypass (450 seconds)
- D — ______(c): Do you need anything? (i.e., NDMB)
- D — ______(d): Turn off the inotropes, etc.
- S — ______(e): Pull the PA catheter back 5 cm to avoid pulmonary arterial occlusion/rupture.
- U — ______(f): Account for _______(3) urine.
- E — ______(g): Check the arterial cannula for bubbles.
Answers:
a. open
1. splash
b. Heparin
2. ACT
c. Drugs
d. Drips
e. Swan
f. Urine
3. bypass
g. Emboli