Title: Challenging Cases in Perioperative Medicine
1Challenging Cases in Perioperative Medicine
- Margaret M. Beliveau MD
- General Internal Medicine
- Mayo Clinic,
- Rochester, Mn
2Disclosures
- No relevant industry conflict of interest
- I will not be discussing off-label use of drugs
- I have 2 teenage drivers, which resulted in all
my hair turning grey
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4Objectives
- Discuss the management of patients with cardiac
stents in the perioperative setting - Discuss the perioperative management of the frail
elderly patient with multiple co-morbidities - Discuss issues in hypertension management in the
perioperative setting - Discuss the perioperative management of patients
with hemophilia
5Case 1
- A 70 year old man falls while out walking his
dog. For the next week, his family notices
progressive gait instability. After a second
fall, they take him to the emergency room, where
he is discovered to have a large right subdural
hematoma.
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7Case 1
- He had an ST elevation MI 4 months ago at an
outside facility and a drug-eluting stent was
placed (paclitaxel). No further information is
available. - He also has a history of recurrent DVT and PE has
been maintained on warfarin - Bipolar disorder
8Case 1
- Lexapro 20 mg by mouth daily
- Aspirin 325 mg by mouth daily
- Warfarin 4 mg by mouth daily
- Plavix 75 mg by mouth daily
- Atenolol 75 mg daily
9Case 1
- INR 2.9 on admission
- Plan for Burr hole evacuation of subdural
hematoma
10Case 1
- In addition to stopping the warfarin, what do you
tell the surgeon with regard to his medications?
11Case 1
- The patient should undergo the surgical procedure
on aspirin and clopidogrel - The aspirin should be stopped, but the
clopidogrel should be continued - The aspirin and clopidogrel can be interrupted
for the surgical procedure - The clopidogrel can be stopped, but the aspirin
should be continued
12Case 2
- 72 yo man
- Nov. 2006- gross hematuria
- TURBT, muscle invasive bladder cancer
- Cystectomy recommended, but preoperative cardiac
evaluation abnormal - Radiation therapy, ended June 2007
- Feb. 2008- recurrent hematuria
13Case 2
- Chemotherapy given
- Ongoing hematuria, now transfusion dependent
- Proposed curative cystectomy
14Case 2
- March 2007- abnormal EKG on preoperative
evaluation - Coronary angiogram- CABG recommended, patient
refused - 15 bare metal stents placed
- July 2007- patient complains of fatigue
- Angiogram- restenosis
15Case 2
- 14 more drug eluting stents placed
- 5- LAD, 5- RCA, 4- circumflex
- March 2008- adenosine sestamibi positive for
ischemia (severe left main disease), small area
of infero-septal infarct - Patient remains asymptomatic
- Cardiology evaluation benefits of surgery
outweigh risks
16Case 2
- What do you tell the surgeon with regard to his
medications?
17Case 2
- The patient should undergo the surgical procedure
on aspirin and clopidogrel - The aspirin should be stopped, but the
clopidogrel should be continued - The aspirin and clopidogrel can be interrupted
for the surgical procedure - The clopidogrel can be stopped, but the aspirin
should be continued
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19The Story of the Stent
- Bare Metal Stent (BMS) first introduced in the US
in 1994 - Drug Eluting Stent (DES) became available in 2003
- Over 4 million stents (BMS and DES) placed
annually worldwide
20The Story of the Stent
- DES are being deployed in 80-90 of coronary
interventions in the US (the majority of these
for off label indications) - More than 6 million drug eluting stents have been
placed since they became available in 2003
21FDA Indications for Use
- The CYPHER (Sirolimus-eluting Coronary Stent) is
indicated for - improving coronary luminal diameter in patients
with symptomatic ischemic disease due to discrete
de novo lesions of length 30 mm in native
coronary arteries with reference vessel diameter
of 2.5 mm to 3.5 mm. - The TAXUS (Express Paclitaxel-Eluting Coronary
Stent System) is indicated for - improving luminal diameter for the treatment of
de novo lesions 28 mm in length in native
coronary arteries 2.5 to 3.75 mm in diameter.
22Off-Label Indications for Drug Eluting Stents
- 50-60 of DES are placed for off-label use
23Iakovou et al JAMA 2005Prospective observational
cohort of 2229 consecutive patients who had DES
placed
9 month followup
Subacute lt 30 Days
Late gt 30 Days
Cumulative incidence of stent thrombosis 1.3
24Iakovou et alJAMA 2005
- In this study, 29 of the patients who
prematurely discontinued dual antiplatelet
therapy developed stent thrombosis - Case fatality rate for patients who developed
stent thrombosis was 45 - These were all patients who had stent placement,
not just patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery
25What Do You Recommend if a Patient with a Recent
Stent Needs Surgery?
- Approximately 5 of patients who undergo coronary
stenting require noncardiac surgery within 1 year
of stenting - Fear of excessive bleeding leads to the generally
accepted policy of discontinuing these agents
7-10 days before elective surgery
26The Perfect Storm
Trouble
27Abrupt discontinuation of clopidogrel
Abrupt discontinuation of aspirin
- Rebound effect
- Significantly increased inflammatory
prothrombotic state - Significantly increased platelet adhesion and
aggregation - Excessive thromboxane A2 activity
- Surgical intervention with increased
prothrombotic and inflammatory state - increased cytokines, neuroendocrine inflammatory
mediator release - increased platelet adhesiveness and persistently
high platelet counts - increased release of procoagulant factors
- decreased or impaired fibrinolysis
Prothrombotic state with incompletely
endothelialized stent(s)
Stent thrombosis, MI, Death
Newsome LT Anesth Analg 2008 107570-90
28Anti-platelet Drugs
- Widely used for primary and secondary prevention
of cardiovascular disease - Plaque stabilization
- Used after placement of intracoronary stents to
prevent thrombosis
29Anti-platelet Drugs
- Continuationgt increased risk of perioperative
bleeding - Interruptiongtrisk of stent thrombosis
30Anti-platelet Drugs
- Aspirin
- Thienopyridines (clopidogrel)
- GP IIb/IIIa receptor antagonists
31Anti-platelet Drugs
- Bleeding risks
- No large prospective randomized trials
- Aspirin risk of bleeding increased by a factor
of 1.5, without increased morbidity or mortality - Risk highest in specific procedures CABG,
prostatectomy and intra-cranial neurosurgery
Chassot PG BJA 99316-28, 2007
32Anti-platelet Drugs
- Dual therapy ASA plus clopidogrel
- Moderate increase in surgical blood loss, but not
in morbidity, mortality or surgical outcome - Exception intracranial neurosurgery
33Anti-platelet Drugs
- Risks of maintaining
- Increased surgical blood loss
- Increased transfusion rate
- Withdrawal risks
- Rebound increased platelet adhesiveness
- Doubled infarction and death rate in acute
coronary syndrome - Increased risk of stent thrombosis with high
mortality
34Risk of Stent Thrombosis
- High risk stents long, proximal, multiple,
overlapping, small vessels, bifurcation - High risk patients Low EF, diabetes
- High risk timing lt 6 weeks after bare metal
stent lt 12 months after drug-eluting stent
35Risk of Stent Thrombosis
- If stent not completely endothelialized, risk of
acute stent thrombosis increased - Prothrombotic state induced by surgery
36Risk of Stent Thrombosis
- The most powerful predictor of acute stent
thrombosis with BMS is time delay of lt 14 days
between implantation and interruption of
anti-platelet therapy
37Risk of Stent Thrombosis
- Drug-eluting stents adverse clinical events (MI,
death) noted when patients stopped anti-platelet
therapy prematurely
38The Perioperative Dilemma
- Discontinue antiplatelet drugs perioperatively
- Stent thrombosis
- MI
- Cardiac death
- Continue perioperative antiplatelet drugs
- Surgical bleeding
39The Perioperative Dilemma
- Based on currently available data, the risk of
withdrawing anti-platelet drugs is greater than
continuing them - Withdrawal imposes perioperative cardiac death
rate that is increased 5-10 times
40Chassot PG BJA 99316-28, 2007
41Society for Cardiovascular Angiography Clinical
Alert, Jan 2007
42Joint Advisory Recommendations and Noncardiac
Surgery
- Consider bare metal stent if patient requires PCI
and is likely to require invasive or surgical
procedure within next 12 months. - Educate patient prior to discharge re risk of
premature antiplatelet discontinuation. - Instruct patient to contact treating cardiologist
before antiplatelet discontinuation
43Joint Advisory Recommendations and Noncardiac
Surgery
- Healthcare providers who perform surgical or
invasive procedures must be made aware of
catastrophic risks of premature antiplatelet
discontinuation and should contact the treating
cardiologist to discuss optimal management
strategy
44Joint Advisory Recommendations and Noncardiac
Surgery
- Defer elective procedures for which there is
bleeding risk until completion of antiplatelet
course - 1 month bare metal stent
- 12 months drug eluting stent
- For patient with drug eluting stents who are to
undergo procedures that mandate discontinuation
of thienopyridine (e.g., clopidogrel), continue
aspirin if at all possible and restart
thienopyridine as soon as possible
45Joint Advisory Recommendations and Noncardiac
Surgery
- No evidence for bridging therapy with
antithrombins, warfarin, or glycoprotein
IIIB/IIIA agents
46Proposed Approach for Management of Dual
Antiplatelet Therapy with Previous PCI who
Require Surgery
Balloon Angioplasty
Bare-metal Stent
Drug-eluting Stent
lt365 Days
lt 30-45 Days
lt 14 Days
gt 14 Days
gt365 Days
gt 30-45 Days
Delay Elective or Non-urgent Surgery
Delay Elective or Non-urgent Surgery
Proceed to Operating Room with Aspirin
Proceed to Operating Room with Aspirin
Based on Expert Opinion, from the ACC/ AHA
guidelines, 2007
47Back to the patients
- Patient 1 Drug-eluting stent, DVT/PE, on
warfarin, aspirin and clopidogrel, sub dural
hematoma - My recommendations Stop antiplatelet agents,
restart aspirin 5 days after surgery if stable,
restart clopidogrel as soon as possible after
surgery (10 days-2 weeks per neurosurgeon) - ? Loading dose (300 mg) of clopidogrel
48Case 1
- The patient should undergo the surgical procedure
on aspirin and clopidogrel - The aspirin should be stopped, but the
clopidogrel should be continued - The aspirin and clopidogrel can be interrupted
for the surgical procedure - The clopidogrel can be stopped, but the aspirin
should be continued
49Back to the patients
- Patient 2 29 stents, locally invasive bladder
cancer - Underwent radical cystoprostatectomy, limited
pelvic lymphadenectomy, and ileal conduit
formation - Aspirin and clopidogrel held prior to surgery
(despite our recommendations) - POD1
50Case 2
- The patient should undergo the surgical procedure
on aspirin and clopidogrel - The aspirin should be stopped, but the
clopidogrel should be continued - The aspirin and clopidogrel can be interrupted
for the surgical procedure - The clopidogrel can be stopped, but the aspirin
should be continued
51Case 2
- However, the surgeon was not comfortable
operating with aspirin and clopidogrel on board,
and these were held prior to surgery - Surveillance ECG was done on POD1
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53Back to the Patients
- ST elevation MI
- Preserved ejection fraction
- Treated medically, dismissed from the hospital
POD 15 - Died 5 months later from complications of bladder
cancer
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55- Older patients are at increased risk for a host
of complications and it is probably easier to
precipitate these complications than to prevent
them. This precarious state is a function of
decreased functional reserve, variable response
to stress, and the number of comorbidities. - DJ Cook and GA Rooke, 2003, Anesth Analg.
56Case 1
- A 92 yo woman, in a nursing home because of
advancing dementia, falls and fractures her hip
while making her bed! - Past history includes dementia, hypertension,
atrial fibrillation, moderate to severe aortic
and mitral insufficiency, pulmonary hypertension
and congestive heart failure (LVEF40).
57Case 1
- Can walk a short distance, but does complain of
dyspnea - Meds Toprol XL, Lisinopril, Donepezil
58Case 1
- Exam
- Awake and alert, not oriented to time or place
- Hard of hearing
- Pulse 80, irregularly irregular
- Holosystolic murmur at the apex, early diastolic
murmur, lungs with basilar crackles - No edema
59Case 1
- Data
- EKG A. fib with controlled ventricular response
- Sodium 128, creatinine 1.6, BUN 52
- UA gt100 WBCs with bacteria present
60- You are the medical consultant. What would you
do? - Tell the patient and her family that the risk of
surgery is too high, and recommend hospice - Send the patient to the ICU for invasive
monitoring, and allow her to go to surgery - Get a cardiology consult and let them decide
- Treat the UTI, start to correct the sodium, then
send the patient to the OR when the Nagt 135
61Weighing the risks and benefits
- Benefits
- The mortality of an unrepaired hip fracture is
extremely high- as much as 90 in the first 3
months - Surgical repair will relieve pain and improve her
overall functional status
62Weighing the risks and benefits
- Risks
- Known heart disease, with at least moderate
valvular disease, CHF, and pulmonary hypertension
implies little cardiac reserve to tolerate the
stress of surgery - Her dementia makes obtaining informed consent
from the patient difficult or impossible
63Weighing the risks and benefits
- Her dementia puts her at increased risk of
postoperative delirium - The presence of hyponatremia puts her at
increased risk of postoperative delirium - Elevated creatinine means that her renal reserve
is limited and is also an additional risk factor
for perioperative cardiac complications - She already has a urinary tract infection
64Risks and Benefits
- Known heart disease
- Dementia
- Hyponatremia
- Elevated creatinine
- Urinary tract infection
- The mortality of an unrepaired hip fracture is
extremely high- as much as 90 in the first 3
months - Surgical repair will relieve pain and improve her
overall functional status
65Case 2
- An 89 yo woman who is being evaluated for total
hip arthroplasty - Hip fracture 9 months ago, ongoing severe hip
pain, which has limited her ability to function - Had NSTEMI after her hip fracture
- LVEF40 with RWMAs
66Case 2
- Postoperatively
- Acute on chronic renal insufficiency
- Delirium, which gradually cleared
- Now
- Lives alone with support from her family
- Does most of her own ADLs, but not iADLs
- Mild cognitive dysfunction
- Urinary incontinence
67Case 2
- Exam
- Heart rate 90, some PVCs
- Lungs clear
- Heart S3 gallop, no murmurs
- No edema
- Mild cognitive dysfunction
68Case 2
- Data
- Hgb 13.6, MCV 100.1
- K 5.0, creatinine 2.1
- NT-proBNP 2926 (nllt263)
- Dobutamine Stress Echo positive for myocardial
ischemia, which occurred at a heart rate of 110
69- You are the medical consultant. What do you
recommend? - Start beta blockers and titrate to heart rate
55-65 before surgery - This is an elective procedure and should not be
done because of the cardiac risk - Refer the patient for coronary angiography before
surgery - Defer the decision until the patient has been
seen by cardiology, nephrology and neurology
70Weighing the risks and benefits
- Benefits
- Relieve pain
- Improve function, which has been compromised due
to pain - Maintain independence
- Improve quality of life
71Weighing the risks and benefits
- Risks
- Coronary artery disease with abnormal DSE
- Renal insufficiency increases the risk of
perioperative cardiac event - Renal insufficiency, with creatinine clearance of
about 14 ml/min increases the risk of drug
toxicity
72Weighing the risks and benefits
- Previous postoperative delirium and mild
cognitive decline increase the risk of
postoperative delirium - MCV of 100.1 raises the question of malnutrition,
which is associated with increased perioperative
mortality
73Risks and Benefits
- Benefits
- Relieve pain
- Improve function, which has been compromised due
to pain - Maintain independence
- Improve quality of life
- Risks
- Known CAD
- Renal insufficiency
- Cognitive dysfunction and delirium risk
- Malnutrition
- CHF?
74Case 3
- A 98 year old woman falls in her nursing home
while ambulating with her walker. - Right humerus and right hip fracture
75Case 3
- Past history
- CHF with 2/4 diastolic dysfunction
- Severe aortic stenosis (not felt to be a surgical
candidate) - Moderate dementia
- Chronic renal insufficiency
- Anemia (refused workup)
- Atrial fibrillation, heart rate drops to 20-30
with beta blocker
76Case 3
- Medications
- Lisinopril
- Lasix
- Albuterol inhaler (no documented COPD)
- Celexa
77Case 3
- ROS (per family)
- No dyspnea
- Ambulates with walker
- No syncope
78Case 3
- Exam
- P 61 irregular, BP 130/80
- 3/6 late peaking systolic murmur
- Lungs clear
- No edema
79Case 3
- Labs
- Hgb 9.2 gm/dL, MCV 106.7, WBC 11.6, Plt 213, INR
1.0 - Na 138, K 4.2, Cl 102, HCO3 28, BUN 35, Cr 1.7,
Glucose 148 - EKG Sinus rhythm, prolonged QT, LAFB, ST-T
abnormalities
80- You are the medical consultant. What do you
recommend? - The surgery is too high risk and the patient
should be referred to hospice - She should be started on beta blockers prior to
surgery - Her anemia should be corrected and she should be
monitored in the ICU postoperatively - She should be evaluated by cardiology to see if
her valve can be repaired prior to surgery
81Weighing the Risks and Benefits
- Benefits
- She is having considerable pain and surgery would
relieve that pain - She does not want to be non-ambulatory for a
prolonged period of time - High mortality if hip fracture not repaired
82Weighing the Risks and Benefits
- Risks
- Critical aortic stenosis, will not tolerate
hypotension or atrial fibrillation - Cannot be given beta blockers
- High risk of postoperative delirium
- Surgery will carry a high mortality
83Risks and benefits
- Benefits
- Pain relief
- Ambulation
- Mortality from un-repaired hip fracture
- Risks
- Critical aortic stenosis
- Dementia- delirium risk
- High surgical mortality
84Principles of perioperative geriatric care
- Functional assessment
- Prevention of predictable disasters
- Management of complexity
- Seeking cumulative small gains in function
- Aggressive rehabilitation
85Principles of preoperative geriatric care
- Interdisciplinary team care
- Attention to social support status
- Guarding autonomy in end-of-life decision making
- Understanding the effects of dementia in the
clinical setting
86Decision-making
- Pitfalls
- Underestimate of predicted remaining lifespan
- Failure to fully consider consequences of not
doing the surgery
87Decision-making
- Goals of surgical therapy
- Maintain quality of life
- Improve or maintain functional status and
independence - Relieve pain
88(No Transcript)
89Some other issues
- Elective vs emergency surgery
- Emergency operations are a significant source of
morbidity and mortality in older patients - Older patients require emergency operations more
frequently than younger patients
90Some other issues
- Morbidity rates 30- 68 for emergency operations
in older patients - General surgical procedures in patients over 90
all deaths after emergency surgery
91Some other issues
- Many elderly patients present for emergency
surgery for known conditions which could have
been treated with elective surgery
92In the end
- Elderly patients often benefit from surgical
therapy - Benefits include
- Enhanced patient function and independence
- Improved quality of life
- Relief of pain and suffering
93In the end
- Elderly patients are at increased risk from
surgical procedures - Age associated decline in organ system function
- Alterations in pharmacokinetics
- Decreased tolerance of stress
- Increasing presence of comorbidities
94In the end
- Medical team caring for these patients is
responsible for - Thorough preoperative assessment
- Identification of risk factors
- Optimization of medical conditions whenever
possible
95In the end
- Postoperatively, the medical team must
- Correct metabolic problems quickly
- Monitor drugs to prevent adverse effects
96In the end
- Provide for adequate nutrition
- Be aware of signs of infection
- Encourage mobility and ambulation
- Provide adequate psychosocial support for
patients and families
97In the end
- Comprehensive, multidisciplinary approach is
improving surgical outcomes and improving
morbidity and mortality in elderly patients
98Follow-up Case 1
- 92 yo woman with dementia, heart disease, hip
fracture - Well Ăź-blocked, no obvious heart failure
- Seen by cardiology
- Son (POA) gave informed consent, understood risks
and benefits - Went to ICU postoperatively x 24 hours
- No postoperative delirium
- Returned to NH POD 6
99Case 1
- You are the medical consultant. What would you
do? - Tell the patient and her family that the risk of
surgery is too high, and recommend hospice - Send the patient to the ICU for invasive
monitoring, and allow her to go to surgery - Get a cardiology consult and let them decide
- Treat the UTI, start to correct the sodium, then
send the patient to the OR when the Nagt 135
100Follow-up Case 2
- 89 yo woman with CAD, positive DSE
- Low risk positive stress test
- ?-blockers started, heart rate controlled in 60s
- Underwent total hip replacement without problems,
dismissed POD 5
101Case 2
- You are the medical consultant. What do you
recommend? - Start beta blockers and titrate to heart rate
55-65 before surgery - This is an elective procedure and should not be
done because of the cardiac risk - Refer the patient for coronary angiography before
surgery - Defer the decision until the patient has been
seen by cardiology, nephrology and neurology
102Follow-up Case 3
- 98 year old woman, hip fracture, aortic stenosis,
renal insufficiency, dementia - Seen by cardiology, no beta blocker, recommended
keeping intravascular volume high - Patient, family agree to proceed despite risks
- Surgery tolerated well, to ICU postoperatively
for 24 hours
103Case 3
- You are the medical consultant. What do you
recommend? - The surgery is too high risk and the patient
should be seen by hospice - She should be started on beta blockers prior to
surgery - Her anemia should be corrected and she should be
monitored in the ICU postoperatively - She should be evaluated by cardiology to see if
her valve can be repaired prior to surgery
104- We must be very careful not to protect our
patients from perceived surgical risk and deny
them the benefits of a carefully planned surgical
procedure
105(No Transcript)
106Case
- 68 year old female scheduled for an elective open
cholecystectomy tomorrow, AM surgery - Past history HTN, depression
- Meds Lisinopril 40 mg po AM, Sertraline 50mg po
q HS.
107Case
- Labs Creatinine 1.4, Na and K normal
- ECG normal
- Exam unremarkable, although she is very anxious
- Vitals BP 165/98, P 72
108- You are the medical consultant. What do you
recommend? - Cancel the surgery until her blood pressure is lt
140/85 - Start HCTZ, send to surgery tomorrow
- Continue her current medication, send to surgery
tomorrow - Start beta blockers, send to surgery tomorrow
109Chronic hypertension
- Is chronic hypertension really a risk factor for
perioperative complication? - Is elevated BP prior to surgery a risk?
- What evidence supports delaying elective surgery
in the patient with poorly controlled
hypertension? - How much BP control is needed and for how long
preop?
110Prys-Roberts et al. Studies of anaesthesia in
relation to hypertension. Br J Anaesth 1971
- 34 patients elective anesthesia surgery
- 15 normotensive
- 19 hypertensive (treated and untreated)
- Mean BP similar in both groups
- Untreated had greater decrease in BP at induction
- Untreated had more myocardial ischemia
- No adverse events in either group
- Implication Defer surgery to treat hypertension
111Meta analysis of 30 studies No evidence that
preoperative hypertension directly affects
perioperative outcome
112No perioperative risk Stage I BP (140-159 /
90-99) Stage II BP (160-179 / 100-109) Control
BP Preop Stage III BP (gt180 / gt110)
113No perioperative risk Stage I BP (140-159 /
90-99 Stage II BP (160-179 / 100-109) Control
BP Preop Stage III BP (gt180 / gt110)
NO Supportive evidence
114No discussion of perioperative hypertension
JNC VI 1997
115JNC VII December 2003
116JNC VII
117(No Transcript)
118ACC / AHA 2007 Preoperative Evaluation Guideline
ACC / AHA 2007 Guideline
119ACC / AHA 2007 Preoperative Evaluation Guideline
(ACC / AHA 2007 Guideline)
ACC / AHA 2007 Guideline
ACC / AHA 2007 Guideline
120BP 165/98
- You are the medical consultant. What do you
recommend? - Cancel the surgery until her blood pressure is lt
140/85 - Start HCTZ, send to surgery tomorrow
- Continue her current medication, send to surgery
tomorrow - Start beta blockers, send to surgery tomorrow
121Major issues of chronic hypertension
- Too aggressive control of BP a problem
- Increased perioperative hemodynamic lability
- More comorbidities
- CAD
- CHF
- CRF
- Medication management
- perioperative continuation of medications
122(No Transcript)
123Case
- A 65 year old man with known moderate hemophilia
A presents with an infected right total knee
arthroplasty - The surgical plan is for initial removal of the
infected prosthesis, with placement of an
antibiotic impregnated spacer, IV antibiotics,
and ultimately placement of a new prosthesis
124Case
- The patient has required bilateral total knee
arthroplasties, due to damage from multiple
hemarthroses - He also has a history of type 2 DM, CAD and
hypertension
125Case
- You are the medical consultant. The surgeon asks
about perioperative management of his bleeding
problems. What do you recommend?
126- Treatment should be based on his clinical course
- He should receive Factor 8 concentrate to
maintain his level at 100 perioperatively - He should receive both Factor 8 concentrate and
LMWH perioperatively - He should receive Factor 8 concentrate to
maintain his level at 75 and no DVT prophylaxis
127Classification of Hemophilia
128Antithrombotic Prophylaxis In Persons With
Hemophilia Undergoing Orthopedic Surgery
129Prophylaxis Schedule For Indications Other Than
Cardiovascular Diseases In Elderly Persons With
Severe Hemophilia
Major surgery, especially orthopedic
Mancucci PM, Blood 2009
130- Treatment should be based on his clinical course
- He should receive Factor 8 concentrate to
maintain his level at 100 perioperatively - He should receive both Factor 8 concentrate
(Level 100) and LMWH perioperatively - He should receive Factor 8 concentrate to
maintain his level at 75 and no DVT prophylaxis
131References- Stents
- Shilling AM, Duriex ME. Pharmacologic Modulation
of operative Risk in Patients Who Have Cardiac
Disease. Anesthesiology Clin N Am 2006
24365-379. - Newsome LT, Weller RS et al. Coronary Artery
Stents II. Perioperative Considerations and
Management. Anesth Analg 2008 107570-90.
132References- Stents
- Chassot PG, Delabays A, Spahn DR. Perioperative
antiplatelet therapy the case for continuing
therapy in patients at risk of myocardial
infarction. Br J Anesth 200799 316-28. - Iakovou I et al. Incidence, predictors and
outcomes after successful implantation of
drug-eluting stents. JAMA 2005 293(17)2126-30.
133References- Elderly Patients
- Beliveau M, Multach M. Perioperative Care of the
Elderly Patient. Med Clin No Am 2003 87 273-89. - Pofahl W, Pories W. Current Status and Future
Directions of Geriatric General Surgery. J Am
Geriatr Soc 2003 51 S351-S354.
134References-Elderly Patients
- Solomon D, Burton J, et al. The New Frontier
Increasing Geriatrics Expertise in Surgical and
Medical Specialities. J Am Geriatri Soc 2000 48
702-704. - Cook DJ, Rooke GA. Priorities in Perioperative
Geriatrics. Anesth Analg 2003 96 1823-36.
135References- Hypertension
- Comfere T, et al. Angiotensin System Inhibitors
in a General Surgical Population. Anesth Analg
2005 100636-44.
136References- Hemophilia
- Mannucci P, et al. How I treat age-related
morbidities in elderly persons with hemophilia.
Blood 2009 114(26) 5256-63.