Background: Laparoscopic surgery is normally performed under
general anaesthesia, but regional techniques have been found beneficial,
usually in the management of patients with major medical problems. In the study
group, following evidence that spinal anesthesia is safe compared to general
anesthesia, spinal anesthesia has become the preferred technique for this
procedure.
Aim: This retrospective study highlights laparoscopic
cholecystectomy under thoracic spinal anesthesia.
Methods: A total of 505 laparoscopic cholecystectomy patients
operated under spinal anesthesia were included in this study. Spinal anesthesia
was between T8 to T11, with a 27G cutting point or pencil tip in lateral or
sitting. Spinal anesthesia was performed with two doses of 0.5% bupivacaine
hyperbaric plus 25 µg of fentanyl, until reaching the sensitive level of T3. The
study evaluated the demographics, analgesia, and degree of motor block,
incidence of paresthesia, bradycardia, hypotension, anesthesia success and
neurological complications.
Results: All 505 patients developed spinal anesthesia. Neither the
dose of hyperbaric solution of 0.5% bupivacaine nor the addition of fentanyl
affected the onset of sensory block. The duration of the sensory block was
greater than the motor block with a hyperbaric solution. Bradycardia occurred
in 16 (3.1%) patients and was not correlated with the level of thoracic
puncture. Hypotension occurred in 82 (16.2%), with no significant association
with the dose of local anesthetic. None of the 505 patients had the maximum
degree of lower limb motor block, with significant differences in terms of
dose. Paresthesia was observed in 28 (5.5%) without significant differences
between needles. All paresthesias were transient and without residual sequelae.
The creation of the pneumoperitoneum is an essential component of laparoscopic
procedures. The insufflation of gas into the peritoneal cavity and increased
intraabdominal pressure can cause several cardiocirculatory and pulmonary
effects.
Conclusion: The beginning of the block is fast regardless of the
solution used. By providing a sensory block of longer duration than the motor
block hyperbaric bupivacaine is reflected in a better indication. Thoracic
spinal anesthesia provides excellent anesthesia for lower limb orthopedic
surgery, without neurological sequelae. TSA provides hemodynamic stability with
low need for vasopressors, without the appearance of hypoxemia or hypercarbia,
without the need for an orogastric tube, and moving from the operating table to
the stretcher without assistance, and with excellent analgesia for up to 6
hours and can be used on an outpatient basis.
Author
(s) Details
Luiz
Eduardo Imbelloni
INCA, Rio de Janeiro (RJ), Brazil.
Marcos Fornasari
Hospital Rio Laranjeiras, Rio de Janeiro (RJ), Brazil.
Raphael
Sant’Anna
Unimed Hospital Porto Velho, RO, Brazil.
Geraldo
Borges de Morais Filho
UFPB, João Pessoa-PB, Statistician of the Complexo Hospitalar
Mangabeira, João Pessoa-PB, Brazil.
Please see the book
here:- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/mmrnp/v5/360
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