FAQ's about cardiac, thoracic, and vascular anesthesia and surgery
- What is a cardiovascular anesthesiologist?
A cardiovascular anesthesiologist is a physician who specializes in
providing anesthesia care for patients undergoing either cardiac
(heart), thoracic (lungs) or vascular (blood vessels) surgery. As a
physician, your anesthesiologist spent four years in medical school,
and another four years training to provide anesthesia during surgery.
Cardiovascular anesthesiologists often spend another 1-2 years
learning the particular field of cardiac and/or vascular anesthesia.
Hospitals that specialize in cardiac, thoracic or vascular surgery
often have teams that specialize in doing just these types of surgery.
The specialized teams consist of surgeons, anesthesiologists,
operating room nurses, and the intensive care unit staff.
- How is anesthesia for cardiac, thoracic or vascular surgery
different from that used for other surgeries?
Cardiac, thoracic, and
vascular surgery require specific techniques and may present particular
problems that are not seen in other surgery. For example, the types of
devices to monitor your heart during cardiac or vascular surgery can be
quite different than that used to monitor a patient having other types of
non-cardiac surgery. Your anesthesiologist may insert special tubes
(catheters) in arteries, large veins near the heart, or in the artery
leading from the heart to the lungs (pulmonary artery catheter). Many
patients will be monitored using a echocardiography (ultrasound of the
heart) using a special probe that is place in your esophagus (swallowing
tube) after you are under general anesthesia. Additionally, the type of
stress placed on the heart will be different, and may require specialized
drugs. Patients undergoing cardiac surgery often require cardiopulmonary
bypass (the heart-lung pump), a device that takes over the work of the
heart and lungs during the period of time the surgeon is operating on the
heart.
Most patients undergoing cardiac and vascular surgery will have a general
anesthetic - they will be completely anesthetized (asleep), and will have
a breathing tube in place during the surgery and possibly for a period of
time after surgery. In addition, the anesthesiologist may choose to use a
regional anesthesia technique either during surgery or after surgery to
provide pain relief (analgesia). "Regional" means that the pain relieving
drugs like lidocaine or narcotics are placed right in the area of the
nerves that carry the pain message from the surgical incision. This
technique can involve giving just one dose of drug before the surgery
begins or can involve insertion of a tiny catheter (about the size of
high test fishing line) so that drugs can be given continuously or
repeatedly. A catheter inserted into the area around the spinal canal is
called an epidural. Epidural analgesia is the technique used to provide
relief to pregnant women in labor, and has been used safely for nearly a
hundred years.
- What sorts of information should I tell my anesthesiologist?
Your
anesthesiologist will review all of the medical information that your
other physicians have collected about you, everything about your medical
history and the diagnostic tests that you have had. Anesthesiologists in
particular will want to know many details about your smoking history, the
medications you take on a regular basis AND any over-the-counter, herbal,
or vitamin supplements you take. Your anesthesiologist will discuss with
you which of your medications you should take or did take the morning of
surgery. They will also ask about any alcohol use/abuse, and any personal
or family history of bad reactions to anesthesia (high fevers or a long
time waking up), or nausea or vomiting you may have had in the past after
anesthesia. Because the anesthesiologist will most likely be using a
breathing tube to help control your breathing during surgery, he or she
will want to know about any history of jaw surgery, limitation of
mouth-opening, or problems with placing breathing tubes in you in the past
(called "difficult intubation").
- What is the risk of something bad happening to me?
While the
great majority of patients have no problems related to surgery and the
risks of anesthesia are very low, cardiac, thoracic, or vascular surgery
carries more risk to you than many other surgeries. First of all,
patients needing these types of surgery either do have heart disease or
are at high risk of having heart disease. The risk of having a heart
attack during or right after surgery is higher in cardiac, thoracic, and
vascular patients than for patients without heart disease undergoing other
types of surgery. The risk of a very bad outcome, such as death or
stroke, will be different for each patient. Your surgeon and
anesthesiologist can advise you of your risk profile for the particular
procedure you are scheduled to undergo. While it is important to
understand the risks associated with cardiac, thoracic, and vascular
surgery, these should be weighed against the risks of alternative
therapies. In nearly all cases, you would not be referred for surgery
unless your doctors felt that the benefits of surgery outweighed the
risks.
- What can I do before surgery to decrease my risk?
There are a number of things that patients can do before surgery to
improve their chances of doing well. Most importantly, do not smoke! The
nicotine and other drugs in cigarette and cigar smoke can cause blood
vessels in the heart or legs to constrict (get smaller) and can even cause
a heart attack. Stopping smoking is the most important thing you can do
to improve your health, even if you have smoked for many years. Another
very important thing to do is to increase your activity, even if it is
just going for a walk every day. In your visit to your surgeon before
surgery, you may be given a breathing exercise device (called an
inspirometer) - use it often to improve your breathing - you will be doing
these breathing exercises after surgery to help clear your lungs and
prevent pneumonia. Be sure to follow your doctor's orders to control
other diseases you may have, such as diabetes or high blood pressure.
- What about blood transfusions?
This risk of blood loss and needing a transfusion is higher in cardiac,
thoracic, and vascular surgeries. Patients with cardiac disease may be
taking a drug that thins the blood, because these drugs decrease the risk
of heart attacks. However, these drugs increase the risk of bleeding
during surgery. Blood thinners include aspirin, Plavix, Ticlid, and
coumadin. Mega doses of vitamin E can also cause blood thinning. Be sure
to ask your doctor about whether you should stop any of these drugs before
surgery.
In conjunction with the surgeon, the cardiovascular anesthesiologist may
employ various methods that may potentially reduce your chance of being
transfused with another person's blood (i.e., blood from a blood bank).
These include methods of saving your own blood by using the "cell-saver,"
(i.e., blood lost during the surgery is washed in the operating room and
returned to you), and "acute normovolemic hemodilution," in which your own
blood is collected in the operating room for use later during the surgery,
as needed. Your anesthesiologist may also use medications that
potentially boost the ability of your own blood clotting system. In the
near future, your anesthesiologist may be able to administer blood
substitutes (i.e., medications that function like blood).
If you do need a blood transfusion, however, be assured that the blood
supply is the safest it has ever been. New tests to discover viruses that
might be in the blood have decreased the risk to almost nothing. The risk
of getting hepatitis from a blood transfusion is about 1 in 30,000, the
same sort of risk of being hit by lightning in your lifetime. The risk of
getting HIV or AIDS from a transfusion is around 1 in a million. For more
information about the safety of blood transfusion, or other alternatives
to blood transfusion, you can visit the AABB's we page,
http://www.aabb.org/All_About_Blood/FAQs/aabb_faqs.htm.
For more information on epidural pain control, go to
http://www.ispub.com/xdisp/xdisp.php? xml=journals/ijh/vol2n2/epidural.xml
For more information on what to expect when you are evaluated by your
anesthesiologist before surgery, go to
http://www.ispub.com/ostia/index.php? xmlFilePath=journals/ijh/vol2n2/preop.xml
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