87 results on '"Koichi Tsuzaki"'
Search Results
2. Cardiovascular monitoring in patients with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy in a prone position: A report of 2 cases
- Author
-
Yukihide Koyama, Yu Asami, Haruko Nishikawa, Hiroyuki Ikezaki, and Koichi Tsuzaki
- Subjects
cardiovascular collapse ,hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy ,prone position ,systemic vascular resistance index ,Anesthesiology ,RD78.3-87.3 - Abstract
Supine positioning in patients with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM) can affect their preload, afterload, and heart rate, potentially leading to cardiovascular collapse. Here, we report the successful anesthetic management of two patients with HOCM who underwent spinal surgery in a prone position. The approximate values of the systemic vascular resistance index (SVRI) were continuously calculated without measuring the central venous pressure. Intraoperative monitoring of the SVRI estimates may be helpful in patients with HOCM so as to avoid cardiovascular collapse when monitoring with both transesophageal echocardiography and a central venous catheter is clinically inappropriate.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Perioperative management of a patient with severe cold agglutinin disease by using multimodal warming measures
- Author
-
Yukihide Koyama, Yu Asami, Haruko Nishikawa, Makoto Ozaki, and Koichi Tsuzaki
- Subjects
Anesthesiology ,RD78.3-87.3 - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. C-arm fluoroscopy for tracheal intubation in a patient with severe cervical spine pathology
- Author
-
Yukihide Koyama, Koichi Tsuzaki, Kazuo Ohmori, Koichiro Ono, and Takeshi Suzuki
- Subjects
c-arm fluoroscopic guidance ,severe cervical spine pathology ,tracheal intubation ,Anesthesiology ,RD78.3-87.3 - Abstract
Tracheal intubation is challenging in patients with severe cervical spine pathology. In such cases, awake fiberoptic intubation is the gold standard and safest option for tracheal intubation. However, this technique requires the patient's understanding and cooperation, and therefore, may be contraindicated in patients with refusal or poor tolerance. Herein, we report successful orotracheal intubation in a patient with limited mouth opening and severe cervical spine rigidity under general anesthesia using an extraglottic airway device and a gum-elastic bougie under C-arm fluoroscopic guidance.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. C-arm fluoroscopic -guided subarachnoid block in a super morbidly obese patient
- Author
-
Hideki Tachibana, Yukihide Koyama, Haruko Nishikawa, and Koichi Tsuzaki
- Subjects
Anesthesiology ,RD78.3-87.3 - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Bilevel positive airway pressure therapy in a patient with myotonic dystrophy and postoperative respiratory failure: A case report
- Author
-
Yukihide Koyama, Masashi Kohno, Koichi Tsuzaki, Koki Kamiyama, and Yasuhiro Morimoto
- Subjects
bilevel positive airway pressure ,myotonic dystrophy ,postoperative respiratory failure ,Anesthesiology ,RD78.3-87.3 - Abstract
Respiratory failure is a common complication in patients with myotonic dystrophy (MD) and might be a presenting symptom in the perioperative setting. We report the case of a 59-year-old woman with MD who underwent open cholecystectomy and developed postoperative respiratory failure. Without reintubation, the patient was successfully managed with bilevel positive airway pressure (BiPAP) and was discharged uneventfully. BiPAP may be considered as an alternative for postoperative respiratory failure in patients with MD. Careful observation of patients' postoperative condition and an earlier application of BiPAP are instrumental in avoiding retracheal intubation, which may cause further serious problems in patients with MD.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Successful bilevel positive airway pressure therapy in a patient with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis after emergency laparotomy: A case report
- Author
-
Yukihide Koyama, Koichi Tsuzaki, Hideaki Shimizu, Junko Kuroda, and Soichi Shimizu
- Subjects
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,bilevel positive airway pressure ,emergency laparotomy ,general anesthesia ,postoperative respiratory failure ,Anesthesiology ,RD78.3-87.3 - Abstract
Patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) present an increased risk of postoperative respiratory failure after general anesthesia. We report the case of a 71-year-old man with ALS who underwent emergency laparotomy for small bowel strangulation. After surgery, he remained intubated and was transferred to the high care unit under mechanical ventilation, due to unstable hemodynamics requiring inotropic support. On postoperative day (POD) 3, he was extubated under stable hemodynamics and respiratory status. Immediately after extubation, bilevel positive airway pressure (bilevel PAP) was prophylactically applied to prevent postoperative respiratory failure, which may have been caused by respiratory muscle fatigue, attributed to general anesthesia and surgical stress. On POD 7, bilevel PAP was smoothly weaned off because no signs and symptoms of respiratory failure were observed. On POD 10, he achieved 30 m-walk without rest. No postoperative complications were observed up to one month after surgery. Postoperative respiratory failure may lead to death in patients with neuromuscular disorder. Non-invasive ventilation (NIV) reduces respiratory muscle fatigue, resulting in easy sputum expectoration, promoting CO2washout, and better oxygenation. Consequently, the prophylactic use of NIV to avoid postoperative respiratory insufficiency should be considered in patients with ALS after emergency operation under general anesthesia.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Perioperative management of a pediatric patient with suspected type 1 von Willebrand disease undergoing tonsillectomy: a case report
- Author
-
Hiroyuki Oshika, Yukihide Koyama, Koichi Tsuzaki, Kohmei Ida, and Tomio Andoh
- Subjects
Confact F® ,Plasma-derived factor VIII concentrate ,von Willebrand disease ,von Willebrand factor ,VWD ,VWF ,Anesthesiology ,RD78.3-87.3 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Background Von Willebrand disease (VWD) is the most common inherited bleeding disorder in humans. Coagulopathies such as VWD are evidently risk factors for post-surgical bleeding. Perioperative management of patients with VWD remains controversial and is a major clinical concern. Case presentation A 5-year-old girl was scheduled for tonsillectomy under general anesthesia. Preoperative laboratory tests revealed prolongation of activated partial thromboplastin time and a mild decrease in von Willebrand factor (VWF) activity. Prophylactic administration of desmopressin or VWF was not performed. During tonsillectomy, oozing from the surgical wound was uncontrollable by conventional hemostasis techniques, but complete hemostasis was ensured by plasma-derived coagulation factor VIII concentrate containing VWF. Conclusion Pediatric patients with mild abnormalities in preoperative laboratory tests may have coagulopathies. Prophylactic intervention and/or the preparation of a sufficient amount of coagulation factor VIII concentrate containing VWF may be required in patients suspected of having VWD or with mild VWF deficiency.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The Importance of Skin Testing in Patients With History of Anesthesia-Related Anaphylaxis
- Author
-
Yoriko, Murase, Yukihide, Koyama, Kunishige, Ogasawara, Kei, Morita, and Koichi, Tsuzaki
- Subjects
Anesthesiology ,Humans ,Anesthesia ,Anaphylaxis ,Skin Tests - Published
- 2022
10. Preventing Oxygen Desaturation in Morbidly Obese Patients during ECT
- Author
-
Yukihide Koyama and Koichi Tsuzaki
- Subjects
Oxygen desaturation ,business.industry ,Anesthesia ,Medicine ,Morbidly obese ,business - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Perioperative Management During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Strategies at Three General Hospitals in Japan and a Narrative Review
- Author
-
Yukihide, Koyama, Yasuhiro, Morimoto, Yoshimune, Osaka, Yoshihiro, Aoi, and Koichi, Tsuzaki
- Subjects
COVID-19 Vaccines ,Japan ,SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 ,Humans ,Hospitals, General ,Pandemics - Abstract
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has rapidly spread globally ever since the virus was first identified in December 2019 in Wuhan, China. Despite efforts to accelerate the supply of COVID-19 vaccines worldwide, the global pandemic has continued. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test is currently considered the gold standard for the diagnosis of COVID-19. However, the rate of false-negative PCR for COVID-19 has been reported to be over 10%. Furthermore, an asymptomatic period can last up to 14 days following the infection. Under these circumstances, standard anesthetic practice, surgery scheduling, and approaches to appropriate management of the operating room to protect both patients and medical personnel against COVID-19 transmission need to be reviewed and appropriately modified. In this review, based on our institutional experiences along with the guidelines reported elsewhere, we propose safer and more effective perioperative management amidst the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Published
- 2022
12. Truncal Blocks for Emergency Laparotomy in a High-Risk Patient: A Case Report and Literature Review.
- Author
-
Yukihide Koyama, Kei Morita, Yoriko Murase, Haruko Nishikawa, and Koichi Tsuzaki
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Perioperative management of a patient with severe cold agglutinin disease by using multimodal warming measures
- Author
-
Yu Asami, Makoto Ozaki, Haruko Nishikawa, Yukihide Koyama, and Koichi Tsuzaki
- Subjects
Perioperative management ,business.industry ,Cold agglutinin disease ,Hypothermia ,medicine.disease ,Perioperative Care ,Forced air warming ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Anesthesiology ,Anesthesia ,Medicine ,Humans ,RD78.3-87.3 ,Anemia, Hemolytic, Autoimmune ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Letter to the Editor ,Amino acid infusion - Published
- 2020
14. Bilevel positive airway pressure therapy in a patient with myotonic dystrophy and postoperative respiratory failure: A case report
- Author
-
Koki Kamiyama, Yasuhiro Morimoto, Koichi Tsuzaki, Yukihide Koyama, and Masashi Kohno
- Subjects
postoperative respiratory failure ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Open cholecystectomy ,Case Report ,Myotonic dystrophy ,lcsh:RD78.3-87.3 ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030202 anesthesiology ,Positive airway pressure ,medicine ,Intubation ,In patient ,myotonic dystrophy ,business.industry ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Perioperative ,medicine.disease ,Bilevel positive airway pressure ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,bilevel positive airway pressure ,Respiratory failure ,lcsh:Anesthesiology ,Anesthesia ,business ,Complication - Abstract
Respiratory failure is a common complication in patients with myotonic dystrophy (MD) and might be a presenting symptom in the perioperative setting. We report the case of a 59-year-old woman with MD who underwent open cholecystectomy and developed postoperative respiratory failure. Without reintubation, the patient was successfully managed with bilevel positive airway pressure (BiPAP) and was discharged uneventfully. BiPAP may be considered as an alternative for postoperative respiratory failure in patients with MD. Careful observation of patients' postoperative condition and an earlier application of BiPAP are instrumental in avoiding retracheal intubation, which may cause further serious problems in patients with MD.
- Published
- 2020
15. Prevention of Oxygen Desaturation in Morbidly Obese Patients During Electroconvulsive Therapy: A Narrative Review
- Author
-
Takeshi Suzuki, Shigeru Saito, Makoto Ozaki, Koichi Tsuzaki, and Yukihide Koyama
- Subjects
Supine position ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Neuroscience (miscellaneous) ,medicine.disease_cause ,Laryngeal Masks ,Patient Positioning ,Electroconvulsive therapy ,Functional residual capacity ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Electroconvulsive Therapy ,Hypoxia ,business.industry ,Apnea ,Oxygenation ,Neuromuscular Blocking Agents ,Obesity, Morbid ,Oxygen ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Anesthesia ,Breathing ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Nasal cannula - Abstract
In general, preoxygenation is performed using a face mask with oxygen in a supine position, and oxygenation is maintained with manual mask ventilation during electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). However, hypoxic episodes during ECT are not uncommon with this conventional method, especially in morbidly obese patients. The most important property of ventilatory mechanics in patients with obesity is reduced functional residual capacity (FRC). Thus, increasing FRC and oxygen reserves is an important step to improve oxygenation and prevent oxygen desaturation in these individuals. Head-up position, use of apneic oxygenation, noninvasive positive pressure ventilation, and high-flow nasal cannula help increase FRC and oxygen reserves, resulting in improved oxygenation and prolonged safe apnea period. Furthermore, significantly higher incidence of difficult mask ventilation is common in morbidly obese individuals. Supraglottic airway devices establish effective ventilation in patients with difficult airways. Thus, the use of supraglottic airway devices is strongly recommended in these patients. Conversely, because muscle fasciculation induced by depolarizing neuromuscular blocking agents markedly increases oxygen consumption, especially in individuals with obesity, the use of nondepolarizing neuromuscular blocking agents may contribute to better oxygenation in morbidly obese patients during ECT.
- Published
- 2020
16. Pre‑anesthetic evaluation for a central airway.
- Author
-
Yukihide Koyama, Hidemasa Iwakura, Shingo Takeuchi, and Koichi Tsuzaki
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Perioperative Factors Associated With Chronic Central Pain After the Resection of Intramedullary Spinal Cord Tumor
- Author
-
Saori Hashiguchi, Masayoshi Kato, Takeshi Suzuki, Masaya Nakamura, Hiroshi Morisaki, Nobuyuki Katori, Koichi Tsuzaki, Junzo Takeda, Yuki Onishi-Kato, Shizuko Kosugi, and Akio Iwanami
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Central pain ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Intramedullary spinal cord ,Resection ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030202 anesthesiology ,Humans ,Medicine ,Spinal Cord Neoplasms ,Young adult ,Aged ,Pain Measurement ,Retrospective Studies ,Analysis of Variance ,Pain, Postoperative ,business.industry ,Laminectomy ,Chronic pain ,Follow up studies ,Retrospective cohort study ,Perioperative ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Health Surveys ,Surgery ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Anesthesia ,Neuralgia ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Chronic Pain ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Some patients experience severe chronic pain after intramedullary spinal cord tumor (IMSCT) resection, but the underlying mechanisms have yet to be fully elucidated. We aimed to investigate perioperative factors associated with chronic pain after IMSCT resection.We analyzed data from a postal survey and the medical records of patients who had undergone IMSCT resection in our institution between 2000 and 2008. Chronic pain was assessed using the Neuropathic Pain Symptom Inventory score, and its associations with factors related to tumor pathology, patient demographics, neurological findings, surgery, anesthesia, and perioperative management were determined.Seventy-eight consecutive patients (55 men and 23 women; age 17 to 79 y) were included in the statistical analysis of the present study. In univariate analyses, sex, body mass index, preoperative tumor-related pain, preoperative nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, intraoperative hypotension, postoperative corticosteroids, and decrease in Japanese Orthopaedic Association (JOA) scores were found to be associated with postsurgical chronic central pain. Logistic regression analysis identified 3 significant factors: a decline in JOA scores compared with preoperative values (odds ratio [OR], 3.33; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.18-9.42; P=0.023), intraoperative hypotension (OR, 3.01; 95% CI, 1.02-8.97; P=0.047), and postoperative corticosteroids (OR, 3.21; 95% CI, 1.02-10.09; P=0.046).Decline in JOA score, intraoperative hypotension, and postoperative corticosteroids are independently associated with postsurgical chronic central pain. Intraoperative hypotension and the use of postoperative corticosteroids can be avoided or modified during perioperative management. As results from animal studies have indicated that the administration of corticosteroids may intensify chronic pain, further studies in larger cohorts are required to definitively determine the effect of corticosteroids on postsurgical central pain.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Perioperative management of a pediatric patient with suspected type 1 von Willebrand disease undergoing tonsillectomy: a case report
- Author
-
Yukihide Koyama, Koichi Tsuzaki, Hiroyuki Oshika, Tomio Andoh, and Kohmei Ida
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Confact F® ,Case Report ,von Willebrand factor ,lcsh:RD78.3-87.3 ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Von Willebrand factor ,030202 anesthesiology ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Von Willebrand disease ,Medicine ,VWF ,Desmopressin ,VWD ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,lcsh:Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Surgical wound ,lcsh:RC86-88.9 ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Tonsillectomy ,Plasma-derived factor VIII concentrate ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Coagulation ,lcsh:Anesthesiology ,Hemostasis ,biology.protein ,business ,von Willebrand disease ,medicine.drug ,Partial thromboplastin time ,circulatory and respiratory physiology - Abstract
Background Von Willebrand disease (VWD) is the most common inherited bleeding disorder in humans. Coagulopathies such as VWD are evidently risk factors for post-surgical bleeding. Perioperative management of patients with VWD remains controversial and is a major clinical concern. Case presentation A 5-year-old girl was scheduled for tonsillectomy under general anesthesia. Preoperative laboratory tests revealed prolongation of activated partial thromboplastin time and a mild decrease in von Willebrand factor (VWF) activity. Prophylactic administration of desmopressin or VWF was not performed. During tonsillectomy, oozing from the surgical wound was uncontrollable by conventional hemostasis techniques, but complete hemostasis was ensured by plasma-derived coagulation factor VIII concentrate containing VWF. Conclusion Pediatric patients with mild abnormalities in preoperative laboratory tests may have coagulopathies. Prophylactic intervention and/or the preparation of a sufficient amount of coagulation factor VIII concentrate containing VWF may be required in patients suspected of having VWD or with mild VWF deficiency.
- Published
- 2019
19. [Steroid]
- Author
-
Misa, Kajitani and Koichi, Tsuzaki
- Subjects
Preoperative Care ,Humans ,Steroids ,Glucocorticoids ,Adrenal Insufficiency - Abstract
It has been more than 60 years since the introduc- tion of glucocorticoid therapy as an effective treatment for patients with inflammatory process. Although glu- cocorticoid therapy has been widely accepted as an essential part of certain clinical settings, long-term administration can suppress the hypothalamic pitu- itary-adrenal axis, causing secondary adrenocortical insufficiency with surgical or medical stress. Periopera- tive glucocorticoid replacement may be required in such circumstances, but the amount of supplementa- tion needed to cover their stress during severe illness or following surgery has not been clearly determined. Recent recommendations for glucocorticoid supplemen- tation suggest that steroid coverage should be based on the duration and dosage of chronic steroid therapy, in addition to the type and probable length of the sur- gery. In this article, we give an overview of the cur- rent strategy for determining optimal dose, frequency, and duration of supplemental steroid for the patients with chronic glucocorticoid therapy.
- Published
- 2018
20. Successful bilevel positive airway pressure therapy in a patient with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis after emergency laparotomy: A case report
- Author
-
Junko Kuroda, Koichi Tsuzaki, Hideaki Shimizu, Yukihide Koyama, and Soichi Shimizu
- Subjects
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,bilevel positive airway pressure ,emergency laparotomy ,general anesthesia ,postoperative respiratory failure ,Mechanical ventilation ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Case Report ,Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,medicine.disease ,lcsh:RD78.3-87.3 ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Respiratory failure ,lcsh:Anesthesiology ,Anesthesia ,Laparotomy ,Positive airway pressure ,Breathing ,medicine ,Respiratory muscle ,Respiratory system ,business - Abstract
Patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) present an increased risk of postoperative respiratory failure after general anesthesia. We report the case of a 71-year-old man with ALS who underwent emergency laparotomy for small bowel strangulation. After surgery, he remained intubated and was transferred to the high care unit under mechanical ventilation, due to unstable hemodynamics requiring inotropic support. On postoperative day (POD) 3, he was extubated under stable hemodynamics and respiratory status. Immediately after extubation, bilevel positive airway pressure (bilevel PAP) was prophylactically applied to prevent postoperative respiratory failure, which may have been caused by respiratory muscle fatigue, attributed to general anesthesia and surgical stress. On POD 7, bilevel PAP was smoothly weaned off because no signs and symptoms of respiratory failure were observed. On POD 10, he achieved 30 m-walk without rest. No postoperative complications were observed up to one month after surgery. Postoperative respiratory failure may lead to death in patients with neuromuscular disorder. Non-invasive ventilation (NIV) reduces respiratory muscle fatigue, resulting in easy sputum expectoration, promoting CO2 washout, and better oxygenation. Consequently, the prophylactic use of NIV to avoid postoperative respiratory insufficiency should be considered in patients with ALS after emergency operation under general anesthesia.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. C-arm fluoroscopy for tracheal intubation in a patient with severe cervical spine pathology
- Author
-
Takeshi Suzuki, Kazuo Ohmori, Koichi Tsuzaki, Koichiro Ono, and Yukihide Koyama
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,C arm fluoroscopy ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Tracheal intubation ,Case Report ,Limited mouth opening ,Cervical spine ,lcsh:RD78.3-87.3 ,C-arm fluoroscopic guidance ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,lcsh:Anesthesiology ,Orotracheal intubation ,c-arm fluoroscopic guidance ,severe cervical spine pathology ,tracheal intubation ,medicine ,In patient ,Airway ,business ,Fiberoptic intubation - Abstract
Tracheal intubation is challenging in patients with severe cervical spine pathology. In such cases, awake fiberoptic intubation is the gold standard and safest option for tracheal intubation. However, this technique requires the patient's understanding and cooperation, and therefore, may be contraindicated in patients with refusal or poor tolerance. Herein, we report successful orotracheal intubation in a patient with limited mouth opening and severe cervical spine rigidity under general anesthesia using an extraglottic airway device and a gum-elastic bougie under C-arm fluoroscopic guidance.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. C-arm fluoroscopic -guided subarachnoid block in a super morbidly obese patient
- Author
-
Yukihide Koyama, Hideki Tachibana, Haruko Nishikawa, and Koichi Tsuzaki
- Subjects
lcsh:RD78.3-87.3 ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Subarachnoid block ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Text mining ,lcsh:Anesthesiology ,business.industry ,medicine ,Morbidly obese ,Letters to Editor ,business ,Surgery - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Changes in the incidence, case fatality rate, and characteristics of symptomatic perioperative pulmonary thromboembolism in Japan: Results of the 2002–2011 Japanese Society of Anesthesiologists Perioperative Pulmonary Thromboembolism (JSA-PTE) Study
- Author
-
Masayuki Kuroiwa, Mashio Nakamura, Hiroshi Morimatsu, Michiyoshi Sanuki, Kazuo Irita, Hideki Nakatsuka, and Koichi Tsuzaki
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Pain medicine ,MEDLINE ,Young Adult ,Postoperative Complications ,Japan ,Risk Factors ,Physicians ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Anesthesiology ,Case fatality rate ,medicine ,Humans ,Young adult ,Child ,Intensive care medicine ,Societies, Medical ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Infant ,Perioperative ,Middle Aged ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Child, Preschool ,Anesthesia ,Emergency medicine ,Female ,Pulmonary Embolism ,business - Abstract
This study aimed to examine the incidence, case fatality rate, and characteristics of perioperative symptomatic pulmonary thromboembolism (PS-PTE) throughout Japan.From 2002 to 2011, confidential questionnaires were mailed annually to all Japanese Society of Anesthesiologists-certified training hospitals for data collection to determine the incidence and case fatality rate of PS-PTE patients. Data from 10,537 institutions in which a total of 11,786,489 surgeries had been performed were analyzed using the Mann-Whitney and Chi-square tests.In total, 3,667 PS-PTE cases were identified. The average incidence of PS-PTE was 3.1 (2.2-4.8) per 10,000 surgeries, and the average case fatality rate was 17.9% (12.9-28.8%). The incidence of PS-PTE began to significantly decrease in 2004 compared with that of 2002 (0.0036 vs. 0.0044%: p0.01). The case fatality rate temporarily increased toward 2005 (17.9 to 28.8%); however, it gradually decreased since 2008 (15.7%) and was the lowest (12.9%) in 2011. Regarding the trends in prophylaxis, the rate of mechanical prophylaxis increased significantly in 2003 compared with that of 2002 (59.5 vs. 35.0%: p0.01), and almost plateaued (73.1-83.1%) after 2004. Furthermore, the rate of pharmacological prophylaxis started increasing in 2008 (17.6%) and reached around 30% after 2009 (28.8-30.2%).The results of our 10-year survey study show that the incidence of PS-PTE decreased significantly since 2004, and the case fatality rate seemed to show a downward trend since 2008. Major changes in the distribution of prophylaxis in PS-PTE patients were observed.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The fentanyl concentration required for immobility under propofol anesthesia is reduced by pre-treatment with flurbiprofen axetil
- Author
-
Hideki Miyao, Koichi Tsuzaki, Junko Ichikawa, Makiko Komori, Mitsuharu Kodaka, and Mikiko Tsukakoshi
- Subjects
Adult ,Pre treatment ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Flurbiprofen ,Hemodynamics ,Pharmacology ,Placebo ,Fentanyl ,Anesthesiology ,medicine ,Humans ,Propofol anesthesia ,Propofol ,business.industry ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal ,Electroencephalography ,General Medicine ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Anesthesia ,Anesthesia, Intravenous ,Female ,business ,Anesthetics, Intravenous ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We hypothesized that nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs decrease the plasma fentanyl concentration required to produce immobility in 50% of patients in response to skin incision (Cp50incision) compared with placebo under target-controlled infusion (TCI) propofol anesthesia.Sixty-two unpremedicated patients scheduled to undergo gynecologic laparoscopy were randomly assigned to receive placebo (control group) or flurbiprofen axetil 1 mg·kg(-1) (flurbiprofen group) preoperatively. General anesthesia was induced with fentanyl and propofol, and intubation was performed after succinylcholine 1 mg·kg(-1). Propofol was administered via a target-controlled infusion (TCI) system (Diprifusor™) set at an effect-site concentration of 5 μg·mL(-1). Fentanyl was given by a TCI system using the STANPUMP software (Schafer model). The concentration for the first patient was set at 3 ng·mL(-1) and modified in each group according to the up-down method. Skin incision was performed after more than ten minutes equilibration time. Serum fentanyl concentration, bispectral index (BIS), and hemodynamic parameters were measured two minutes before and after skin incision. The Cp50incision of fentanyl was derived from the mean of the crossovers (i.e., the serum fentanyl concentrations of successive participants who responded and those who did not or vice versa).Ten and 11 independent crossover pairs were collected in the control and flurbiprofen groups, respectively, representing 42 of 62 enrolled patients. The mean (SD) fentanyl Cp50incision was less in the flurbiprofen group [0.84 (0.63) ng·mL(-1)] than in the control group [1.65 (1.15) ng·mL(-1)]; P = 0.007; however, there were no differences in BIS, blood pressure, or heart rate, between groups.Preoperative flurbiprofen axetil decreased the Cp50incision of fentanyl by 49% during propofol anesthesia without changing the BIS or hemodynamic variables.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. QUESTIONNAIRE SURVEY OF THE CURRENT STATUS OF HOSPITAL TRANSFUSION SERVICES IN THE MANAGEMENT OF CRITICAL HEMORRHAGES
- Author
-
Eiichi Inada, Shuichi Kino, Tetsu Yano, Kunihiro Mashiko, Makoto Handa, Hayashi Yoshimura, Kengo Warabi, Koichi Tsuzaki, Kazuo Irita, Shoichi Inaba, and Yoshimasa Kamei
- Subjects
business.industry ,medicine ,Questionnaire ,Medical emergency ,medicine.disease ,business ,Massive transfusion - Abstract
背景·目的: 病院輸血部門は血液センターと輸血使用現場を中継する位置にあり,危機的出血発生時には迅速な対応が要求される.今回,病院輸血部門の体制をアンケート調査し,危機的出血発生時の対応における問題点を明らかにした. 対象·方法: 病床数500床以上の麻酔科認定病院385施設を対象とし,2007年11月に調査を実施した. 成績: 輸血管理体制はほぼ整備されていたが,緊急輸血や大量輸血時への対応マニュアルの記載内容は不十分であった.危機的出血への対応ガイドライン(危機的出血GL)は認識されていたが,院内周知は不足していた.異型適合血使用を阻む要因が多々あった.輸血検査の所要時間,緊急出庫要請から使用可能になるまでの時間は,時間外で延長していた.血液センターからの緊急搬送時間は,時間内·時間外で変わらなかった.過去1年間に未交差同型血の使用実績がある施設は時間内,時間外とも43%,異型適合血に関しては時間内24%,時間外28%であった. 結論: 危機的出血GLなどを参考に危機的出血発生時の院内手順を定め,異型適合血使用に対する啓発活動を行う必要がある.危機的出血発生時には,状況を迅速に判断し,未交差同型血や異型適合血の使用を躊躇しないことが必要である.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Surgical Massive Hemorrhage in Japan
- Author
-
Tomohiro Sawa, Kiyoshi Morita, Koshi Makita, Kazuo Irita, Koichi Tsuzaki, Hideki Nakatsuka, and Michiyoshi Sanuki
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,General surgery ,medicine ,business - Abstract
手術による出血死は麻酔関連偶発症による死亡症例の17%を占めている. 手術に伴う大量出血が発生し, 危機的状況へと拡大していく過程には, 術前の患者状態や病巣の癒着・浸潤のほかに, 手術の手技と判断, 麻酔管理, 血液製剤の準備と追加供給状況, 緊急避難的輸血による対応の有無など, さまざまなヒューマンファクターが関与している. 手術出血死を回避するためには, 医療機関の組織的対応能力と血液センターとの連携を向上させる必要がある.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Anesthesia-related mortality and morbidity over a 5-year period in 2,363,038 patients in Japan
- Author
-
Yasuhide Iwao, H Suzuki, Tsutomu Kobayashi, Yasuo Kawashima, S. Takahashi, Yasuyuki Goto, G Suzuki, T Kugimiya, Shuji Dohi, N Seo, K Yokoyama, Koichi Tsuzaki, Kiyoshi Morita, A Fujii, Kazuo Irita, and M Suzuki
- Subjects
Response rate (survey) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,General Medicine ,Drug overdose ,medicine.disease ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Anesthesia ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Etiology ,business ,Complication ,Developed country ,Cardiac arrest during surgery - Abstract
Background: Statistical data of mortality and morbidity related to anesthesia have not been reported in Japan since World War II. The need to comprehensively examine the events of cardiac arrest as well as mortality prompted the first national study in Japan. Methods: Confidential questionnaires were sent to all Japan Society of Anesthesiologists Certified Training Hospitals every year from 1994 through 1998. Collected data were analyzed for incidence of cardiac arrest and other critical events during anesthesia and surgery, and their outcomes within 7 postoperative days. The principal causes of the critical incidents were also analyzed. Results: With an average response rate of 39.9%, a total of 2,363,038 cases were documented over 5 years. The average incidence per year of cardiac arrest during surgery due to all etiologies and that totally attributable to anesthesia was 7.12 [95%CI: 6.30,7.94] and 1.00 [0.88, 1.12]) per 10,000 cases, respectively. The average mortality per year in the operating room or within 7 postoperative days due to all etiologies and that totally attributable to anesthesia was 7.18 [6.22, 8.13] and 0.21 [0.15, 0.27] per 10,000 cases, respectively. The two principal causes of cardiac arrest during anesthesia and surgery due to all etiologies were massive hemorrhage (31.9%) and surgery (30.2%), and those totally attributable to anesthesia were drug overdose or selection error (15.3%) and serious arrhythmia (13.9%). Preventable human errors caused 53.2% of cardiac arrest and 22.2% of deaths in the operating room totally attributable to anesthesia. Conclusions: The rates in Japan of cardiac arrest and death during anesthesia and surgery due to all etiologies as well as those totally attributable to anesthesia are comparable to those of other developed countries.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Anesthesia-related mortality and morbidity in Japan (1999)
- Author
-
Tsutomu Kobayashi, Koichi Tsuzaki, Yasuo Kawashima, Kazuo Irita, Kiyoshi Morita, Yasuyuki Goto, Norimasa Seo, Yasuhide Iwao, and Shuji Dohi
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,business.industry ,Anesthesia ,Pain medicine ,Anesthesiology ,MEDLINE ,Medicine ,Medical emergency ,business ,medicine.disease - Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Intravenous Morphine Infusion by PCA Pump with Ketamine at Home for a Child with Neuroblastoma
- Author
-
Yoko Watanabe, Saori Hashiguchi, Koichi Tsuzaki, and Junzo Takeda
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Intravenous morphine ,business.industry ,Neuroblastoma ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Ketamine ,business ,medicine.disease ,medicine.drug ,Surgery - Abstract
神経芽細胞腫を伴う7歳患児に対し,モルヒネの静脈内PCAによる在宅疼痛管理を行った.痙痛に対する患児の訴えが的確であり,PCAに対する両親の理解も良好であったため,在宅における痙痛の訴えに応じたボーラス投与や副作用監視が可能であった.病勢の進行とともにモルヒネ必要量が漸増し,最高時960mg・d-1まで及んだが,患児の日常生活に悪影響は認めなかった.またモルヒネ抵抗性の疼痛出現に対してはケタミンの持続静注併用が有効であった.本症例では高用量のモルヒネを必要としたが,注意深い疼痛評価や副作用監視,家族と疼痛緩和チームとの協力により,PCAによる良好な在宅疼痛管理を行い得た.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Evaluation of the Preanesthetic Consultation Clinic in Keio University Hospital
- Author
-
Junzo Takeda, Koichi Tsuzaki, Ryoichi Ochiai, Tatsuya Yamada, and Jiromasayuki Shigematsu
- Subjects
business.industry ,Medicine ,Medical emergency ,University hospital ,business ,medicine.disease - Abstract
慶應義塾大学病院で1996年9月から1997年2月までの6ヵ月間における麻酔科管理の手術件数は2,681例で,そのうち術前に麻酔科診療依頼が出されたのは432例であった.科別でみると,耳鼻咽喉科20.4%,整形外科18.3%,一般外科171%,産婦人科11,6%の順に多く,この4科で全依頼の67.4%を占めた.診療依頼の内容は呼吸•循環器系の合併症に関するものが多く,依頼理由の52.6%を占めた.一方,依頼の内容に不備があったり,必要性が低いと考えられるものが12.1%でみられた.麻酔科術前診療依頼をより有用なものとするために,今回の結果をもとに術前評価•術前依頼の手引きを作成した.加えて,効率のよい周術期管理のために診療依頼の新しいシステムを確立する必要があると考える.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Segmental bioelectrical impedance analysis improves the prediction for extracellular water volume changes during abdominal surgery
- Author
-
Tsuneo Tatara and Koichi Tsuzaki
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Wrist ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Body Water ,Abdomen ,Extracellular fluid ,Electric Impedance ,Humans ,Medicine ,Aged ,Balance (ability) ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,Trunk ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Body Composition ,Female ,Ankle ,Extracellular Space ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Bioelectrical impedance analysis ,Abdominal surgery - Abstract
OBJECTIVE To determine whether the segmental multifrequency bioelectrical impedance analysis may improve the prediction for intraoperative changes in extracellular water volume (deltaECW) compared with whole body multifrequency bioelectrical impedance analysis in abdominal surgical patients. DESIGN Prospective, consecutive sample. SETTING Surgical operative patients in a university-affiliated city hospital. PATIENTS Thirty patients who underwent elective gastrointestinal surgery. INTERVENTIONS Multifrequency bioelectrical impedance analysis was conducted preoperatively (before the induction of anesthesia) and postoperatively (after recovery from anesthesia). Resistance values fitted at zero frequency (R0) in the whole body and in each body segment (arm, trunk, and leg) were determined by performing nonlinear curve-fitting and subsequent extrapolation. DeltaECW values were estimated from the whole body resistance between wrist and ankle using two different prediction formulas. In segmental multifrequency bioelectrical impedance analysis, however, ECW was obtained as the sum of each body segment (arms, trunk, and legs) using the equation newly derived from the cell suspension theory. DeltaECW estimated from both measurements were compared with net fluid balances during surgery. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS R0 in whole body and all body segments significantly decreased after surgery (p < .0001). The most striking decrease in post/preoperative ratios was found in the R0 in the trunk. The post/preoperative ratio of the R0 value in the trunk was significantly lower than the post/preoperative ratio of the R0 value in the leg (p = .0007). DeltaECW from segmental multifrequency bioelectrical impedance analysis was similar to net fluid balance (r2 = .80, bias = -0.03 L), whereas whole body multifrequency bioelectrical impedance analysis resulted in considerable underestimations of deltaECW (r2 = .50, .51, bias = 0.95, 0.53 L). CONCLUSIONS The difference in the prediction of deltaECW between whole body and segmental multifrequency bioelectrical impedance analysis may be explained by the significant decrease in the resistance of the trunk, which contributed only minimally to the whole body resistance. Segmental multifrequency bioelectrical impedance analysis provides a better approach to predict ECW changes in critically ill patients with nonuniform fluid distribution.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Titration of propofol infusion using processed electroencephalogram during combined general and spinal anesthesia
- Author
-
Koichi Tsuzaki and Shuya Kiyama
- Subjects
inorganic chemicals ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Pain medicine ,Spinal anesthetic ,Intravenous Anesthetics ,Spinal anesthesia ,equipment and supplies ,Surgery ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Anesthesia ,Anesthesiology ,medicine ,Propofol ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
To determine the necessary mean infusion rate of propofol during combined nitrous oxide (NTwelve elective gynecological patients were monitored by a Dräger pEEG monitor under NThe mean (SD) induction dose of propofol was 2.9 (0.4) mg·kgTitration of propofol infusion using SEF during combined general and spinal anesthesia provided a rapid recovery without any clinical signs of inadequate anesthesia.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. [Untitled]
- Author
-
Koichi Tsuzaki and Tsuneo Tatara
- Subjects
Hygrometer ,business.industry ,Anesthesia ,General Engineering ,medicine ,Apnea ,Spontaneous respiration ,Relative humidity ,medicine.symptom ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,business ,Lung function ,Rapid response - Abstract
Objective The aim of this study was to detect cyclic changes in the relative humidity (RH) occurring with spontaneous respiration using a rapid-response hygrometer, and to evaluate its potential applicability as an apnea monitor in nonintubated subjects.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. [Incidence and characteristics of perioperative pulmonary thromboembolism in Japan from 2009 through 2011 -the results of perioperative pulmonary thromboembolism research by the Japanese society of anesthesiologists (JSA-PTE research) --]
- Author
-
Masayuki, Kuroiwa, Kazuo, Irita, Michiyoshi, Sanuki, Koichi, Tsuzaki, Hideki, Nakatsuka, and Mashio, Nakamura
- Subjects
Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Time Factors ,Vena Cava Filters ,Adolescent ,Incidence ,Age Factors ,Anticoagulants ,Infant ,Middle Aged ,Young Adult ,Postoperative Complications ,Sex Factors ,Japan ,Anesthesiology ,Risk Factors ,Child, Preschool ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Female ,Child ,Pulmonary Embolism ,Societies, Medical ,Aged - Abstract
This study was designed to investigate the annual incidence and characteristics of perioperative pulmonary thromboembolism (PTE) in Japan from 2009 through 2011, and to compare the current trend with that observed in our previous studies conducted since 2002.In the 3-year study period, a questionnaire was annually mailed to all institutions certified as training hospitals for anesthesiologists by the Japanese Society of Anesthesiologists (JSA). The survey included the parameters of age, sex, type of surgery, and the risk factors in patients who were operated upon.The questionnaire was sent out to total of 3,556 institutions and obtained answers from 2,511 institutions (70.6%) in the 3-year study period. Total 4,432,538 surgeries were conducted and 1,300 cases (0.03%) of perioperative PTE were registered. The incidence of PTE in all the 3 years was significantly lower than that observed in 2002-2003 (P0.01). In addition, the mortality in 2011 was also significantly lower than that in 2002-2003 (P0.05). The incidence of PTE in females (0.04%) was twice of the incidence of males (0.02%). The types of surgery with higher incidence of perioperative PTE were "thoracotomy with laparotomy" (0.08%),"hip joint, limbs" (0.07%) and"craniotomy" (0.06%). Compared with the middle age group (19-65 year-old), the incidence of PTE was twice in the elderly's (66-85 year-old) and in the super-elderly (over 86 year-old) it was thrice. In this survey, most approved risk factors were obesity (44%), malignancy (35%) and long term bed-rest (26%), and the ratio of long term bed-rest was decreasing compared with 2008. In the PTE cases, the ratio of the patients who received anticoagulant drugs (29-30%) or IVC filters placement (4-5%) increased compared with the results of JSA-PTE research in 2008 (P0.01).The incidence and mortality of perioperative PTE decreased;although the factor of decrease in an incidence was considered to be the result of preventive method, as in the decrease in the mortality, the survey should be continued.
- Published
- 2013
35. Ventilation distribution and regional lung impedance during partial unilateral bronchial obstruction
- Author
-
Koichi Tsuzaki, Brett A. Simon, and Jose G. Venegas
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Supine position ,Physiology ,Bronchi ,Dogs ,Physiology (medical) ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Tidal Volume ,medicine ,Carnivora ,Animals ,Lung volumes ,Respiratory system ,Tidal volume ,biology ,business.industry ,Airway Resistance ,Respiratory disease ,Fissipedia ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Respiration, Artificial ,Surgery ,Airway Obstruction ,Respiratory Mechanics ,Breathing ,Lung Volume Measurements ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Tomography, Emission-Computed - Abstract
Significant degrees of main-stem bronchial obstruction may not have a detectable effect on ventilation distribution at normal breathing frequencies. We determined the effect of graded left main-stem bronchial obstruction (area reduction of 50 and 70%) on the distribution of tidal volume (VT) and mean lung volume (VL) using radioactive 13NN and two-dimensional planar positron imaging in six supine anesthetized tracheotomized dogs. Measurements were made during eucapnic high-frequency oscillatory ventilation at frequencies (f) of 0.2, 1, 5, and 10 Hz. Right and left lung respiratory system complex impedance (Z) values were assessed by simultaneous measurements of dynamic regional lung volume by positron imaging and carinal pressure. The results show a progressive shift of VT away from the obstruction at f > 1 Hz, with VT left-to-right (L/R) ratios of 0.9, 0.9, 0.58, and 0.46 at f of 0.2, 1, 5, and 10 Hz, respectively, for 70% obstruction. VT shifts with f for 50% obstruction were similar but of lesser magnitude. VL L/R ratio was 0.88 and did not change with f or obstruction. The real part of Z was frequency dependent and increased at low f independent of obstruction. The real part of Z L/R ratio increased with obstruction at 5 and 10 Hz. At low f there was a difference between left and right imaginary parts of Z due to the difference in VL. There was no significant change in the imaginary part of Z as a result of obstruction. We conclude that up to a 70% unilateral bronchial obstruction is not detectable by distribution of ventilation at f < or = 1 Hz.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. [Risk management in regional anesthesia: spinal epidural hematoma]
- Author
-
Kanako, Makito, Shizuko, Kosugi, and Koichi, Tsuzaki
- Subjects
Anesthesia, Epidural ,Male ,Risk Management ,Hematoma, Epidural, Spinal ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Postoperative Complications ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Pregnancy ,Monitoring, Intraoperative ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Anesthesia, Obstetrical ,Humans ,Female ,Nervous System Diseases ,Intraoperative Complications - Abstract
Spinal epidural hematoma following neuraxial anesthesia is a rare condition that usually presents with acute and, if any, progressive neurological symptoms including pain, sensory/motor impairment, and bladder/ rectal disturbance. Although possible pathogenesis is mainly considered to be a direct injury of Batson's venous plexus, preoperative coagulation status and anticoagulant therapy also play some role in its development. Therefore, to prevent such a disastrous complication, one must choose an appropriate anesthetic technique and monitor neurological function of the patient at a regular time interval. In addition, it is highly recommended to carefully follow the recently revised regional anesthesia guideline for the patient receiving antithrombotic or thrombolytic therapy, although we still need further understanding and investigation of the complexity around this issue.
- Published
- 2011
37. [Postoperative analgesia for hepatic cryosurgery]
- Author
-
Yuki, Onishi, Saori, Hashiguchi, Hiroka, Yoshikawa, Eileen Naomi, Ogawa, Yoko, Fukuda, Shizuko, Kosugi, Koichi, Tsuzaki, and Junzo, Takeda
- Subjects
Analgesics, Opioid ,Postoperative Care ,Risk ,Pain, Postoperative ,Carcinoma, Hepatocellular ,Platelet Count ,Liver Neoplasms ,Humans ,Analgesia, Patient-Controlled ,Middle Aged ,Postoperative Hemorrhage ,Cryosurgery ,Aged - Abstract
Hepatic cryosurgery is an alternative therapeutic choice for patients who are not eligible for surgical liver resection. As this procedure sometimes causes postoperative bleeding tendency, we investigated indication of intravenous patient-controlled analgesia (IVPCA) after this surgery.We measured pre- and postoperative platelet counts, coagulation profile and postoperative pain with IVPCA in 8 patients.Platelet counts decreased from 9.83 +/- 5.38 (x 10(3) x ml(-1)) to 5.91 +/- 4.56 (x10(3) x ml(-1)) postoperatively (P0.01) and the maximum relative decrease was 72%. Platelet counts reached the maximum depression from 1 to 3 POD and in two patients it did not recover by 7 POD. Percentage of prothrombin activity decreased from 79.5 +/- 10.4 to 65.9 +/- 13.2 (P0.01), with the nadir observed from 0 POD to 2 POD. In this study it was difficult to predict the extent of postoperative bleeding tendency beforehand. IVPCA with morphine provided adequate analgesia at rest. Althogh pain on moving seemed rather difficult to treat in two patients, IVPCA also helped patients walk with VAS score less than 55 mm in other patients.Considering the risk of bleeding tendency and epidural hematoma, we recommend IVPCA with opioid for postoperative pain in patients after hepatic cryosurgery instead of epidural analgesia and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.
- Published
- 2010
38. [Emergency compatible, ABO-different blood group transfusion in the operating theater: a survey in regional Japanese Society of Anesthesiologists-certified training hospitals in 2006]
- Author
-
Kazuo, Irita, Eiichi, Inada, Koichi, Tsuzaki, Shoichi, Inaba, Makoto, Handa, Shuichi, Kino, Kunihiro, Mashiko, Takahiko, Kubo, and Kiyoshi, Morita
- Subjects
Incidence ,Transfusion Reaction ,Hemolysis ,ABO Blood-Group System ,Blood Grouping and Crossmatching ,Japan ,Anesthesiology ,Blood Group Incompatibility ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Blood Transfusion ,Emergencies ,Hospitals, Teaching ,Societies, Medical - Abstract
In Japan, emergency blood transfusion practices including ABO-compatible, different blood group transfusion and uncross-matched, ABO-identical blood group transfusion are very limited possibly due to adherence to identical blood transfusion as well as fear of hemolytic reactions due to anti-A, anti-B, anti-RhD and unexpected antibodies. Purpose of the study is to examine the incidence of hemolytic reactions due to compatible, ABO-different blood group transfusion.We conducted a questionnaire survey regarding emergency compatible, different blood group transfusion in the operating theater in hospitals with more than 500 beds among those with an accredited Department of Anesthesiology regarded as regional hospitals. Of 384 institutions, 247 responded to the questionnaire. During the year 2006, compatible, ABO-different blood group transfusion was reported in 112 patients from 32 hospitals, among which 105 patients in 26 hospitals were available for further analysis.Compatible red cell concentrate (RCC), fresh frozen plasma (FFP), and platelet concentrate (PC) were transfused in 23, 10, and 83 patients, respectively. Total amount of compatible RCC, FFP, and PC were 232, 162, and 1,679 units, respectively. In patients who were transfused with compatible RCC, two patients had unexpected antibodies. Overall mortality rate within the 30th post-operative day was 23%. In 80 patients, in whom only PCs were used as compatible blood products, blood loss was 86 +/- 85 ml x kg(-1), 65% of patients underwent cardiovascular surgery, and mortality was 11%, implying that compatible PC was transfused mainly to avoid hemorrhagic diathesis in cardiovascular patients. In 64 patients with blood type of A, B, or AB, who underwent compatible PC transfusion, type O PC, incompatible blood products, were transfused in 9 patients. In 21 patients, in whom only RCCs were used as compatible blood products, blood loss was 206 +/- 224 ml x kg(-1), and mortality was 57%. Therefore, compatible RCCs were transfused mainly to avoid life-threatening events. Uncross-matched, ABO-identical RCC transfusion was performed only in 29% of patients among these 21 patients. Transfusion-related hemolytic reactions were not reported in all 104 patients available for this analysis.Although the patient number was small, the finding that there were no hemolytic reactions might promote emergency blood transfusion practices in Japan. High mortality rate and a low rate of uncross-matched, ABO-identical RCC transfusion in patients with compatible RCC transfusion suggest that promoting emergency blood transfusion practices might reduce mortality rate due to massive hemorrhage in the operating theater.
- Published
- 2009
39. [Intraoperative risk management during thoracic procedures]
- Author
-
Koichi, Tsuzaki
- Subjects
Risk Management ,Mediastinum ,Humans ,Anesthesia ,Thoracic Surgical Procedures ,Hypoxia ,Intraoperative Complications ,Lung ,Respiration, Artificial - Abstract
Risk management in clinical practice is an impor part of medical audit. Although, medical audit consists of monitoring, data collection, peer review and establishing standards, these four steps should be regarded as a series of cyclical process. As a general rule, this concept should be applied to any field of clinical medicine and will contribute to the development of sound quality control scheme. Several complications are known to occur in thoracic anesthesia, especially in one-lung ventilation. For example, malposition of double-lumen endotracheal tube, severe hypoxia and higher airway pressure are relatively common problems, and it would be better for us to prepare for these adverse events beforehand. Auscultation, fiber-optic visualization and proper ventilatory management (eg. lower tidal volume with dependent lung PEEP, alveolar recruitment maneuver, application of CPAP to non-dependent lung) are the recommended technique required to correct these abnormalities. When life-threatening hypoxia is imminent, we should convert to two-lung ventilation without any delay. In this regard, verbal communication between surgical teams should be kept on even ground, each playing key roles in the management of such a critical situation.
- Published
- 2009
40. [Present status of preparatory measures for massive hemorrhage and emergency blood transfusion in regional hospitals with an accredited department of anesthesiology in 2006]
- Author
-
Kazuo, Irita, Eiichi, Inada, Hayashi, Yoshimura, Kengo, Warabi, Koichi, Tsuzaki, Shoichi, Inaba, Makoto, Handa, Tomoe, Uemura, Shuichi, Kino, Kunihiro, Mashiko, Tetsu, Yano, Yoshimasa, Kamei, and Takahiko, Kubo
- Subjects
Operating Rooms ,Time Factors ,Japan ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Blood Loss, Surgical ,Civil Defense ,Humans ,Blood Transfusion ,Anesthesia Department, Hospital - Abstract
Annual surveys conducted by the Japanese Society of Anesthesiologists repeatedly show that hemorrhage is the leading cause of life-threatening events in the operating room.We performed a questionnaire survey regarding the present status of critical hemorrhage/ blood transfusion occurring in the operating room on an institutional scale and individual blood transfusion management in cases of massive hemorrhage (or = 5,000 ml) in hospitals withor = 500 beds and those with an accredited Department of Anesthesiology regarded as regional hospitals.Of 384 institutions, 247 responded to the questionnaire (response rate: 64%), and 692,241 cases managed by anesthesiologists in 2006 were registered. There were 2,657 cases of massive hemorrhage above the circulating blood volume in the operating room, and 404 of them were critical. Thus, the number of cases of massive hemorrhage was 6.6 times that of cases of critical events due to hemorrhage. In the survey of individual cases of massive hemorrhage (or = 5,000 ml), 1,257 cases were registered in 2006, of whom 196 cases (15.6%) died within 30 post-operative days and 160 cases (12.7%) had some sequelae. The amount of transfused red blood cell concentrate was 25.2 +/- 24.2 units. The amount of red blood cell concentrates stocked for emergency was 12.7 +/- 10.1 units for blood group A, 9.7 +/- 7.3 units for group B, 11.9 +/- 9.6 group AB, and 11.3 +/- 11.0 for group O. Therefore, for those other than group O cases, 21-46 units of red blood cell concentrates seemed to be available in the hospital. The survey of individual cases showed uncross-matched, same blood group transfusion and compatible, different blood group transfusion were performed in only 8.2% and 4.3%, respectively. The lowest hemoglobin concentration was below 5 g x dl(-1) in 16.7% of the cases, but uncross-matched, same blood group transfusion was performed only in 19.0% and compatible, different blood group red cell concentrate transfusion in 5.2%. Even in cases who required cardiac massage, uncross-matched, same blood group transfusion was performed only in 17.1% and compatible, different blood group red cell concentrate transfusion in 8.5%. Intraoperative blood salvage was performed in only 5.7% in cases who underwent non-cardiac surgery. The "Guidelines for the Management of Critical Hemorrhage" proposed in 2007 or the manuals for in-hospital emergency blood transfusion were insufficiently recognized, even by anesthesiologists, and rarely known by surgeons. There were no such manuals in more than 60% of the institutions.Undertransfusion may occur in 16.7-28.3% of cases of massive hemorrhage in the operating room, and the rate of emergency blood transfusion was much lower than this percentage. To avoid operation-associated deaths from hemorrhage, the improvement of hospital systems for emergency blood transfusion, including the active use of intraoperative blood salvage, should be promoted.
- Published
- 2009
41. High-frequency ventilation in neonates
- Author
-
Koichi Tsuzaki
- Subjects
Mechanical ventilation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Respiratory distress ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,High-frequency ventilation ,Infant, Newborn ,MEDLINE ,High-Frequency Ventilation ,medicine.disease ,law.invention ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Data extraction ,Bronchopulmonary dysplasia ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Infant Care ,medicine ,Humans ,Intensive care medicine ,Airway ,business ,Lung - Abstract
Study Objective: To provide a brief review of the current status of high frequency ventilation in neonatal respiratory care. Data Identification: Publications appearing between 1980 and 1990 were identified by computer searches using the National Library of Medicine's data base, Medline , and by searching related to physiologic background and clinical reports Study Selection: Studies related to physiologic background and clinical reports of neonatal application were selected individually. Data Extraction: Data concerning the physiologic basis, clinical effectiveness and complications, and latest results of a multicenter randomized trial were evaluated and used to develop a curient concept. Results of Data Synthesis: In early clinical tests of high frequency ventilation, it was considered beneficial that airway pressure lower than that used in conventional mechanical ventilation might reduce the frequency of pulmonary barotrauma. When high frequency ventilation was applied to infants with respiratory distress syndrome, the development of chronic pulmonary complications also was expected to decrease. Although several reports supported this hypothesis, a recent controlled trial involving multiple clinical centers did not find significant improvement in the group treated with high frequency ventilation. Rather, they recognized the frequent occurrence of complications associated with high frequency ventilation and suggested the prior use of conventional ventilation. However, a possible defect of this study design requires further studies to elucidate the source of these conflicting results. Conclusions: As a mode of mechanical ventilation, high frequency ventilation is useful for maintaining ventilation in patients with air leak syndrome or bronchopulmonary fistula or during bronchoscopic examination. But in general, its role as an alternative to conventional ventilation still remains controversial.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. [Cerebrovascular accidents developing in the operating theater: a JSA survey for the year 2004]
- Author
-
Kazuo, Irita, Hideki, Nakatsuka, Koichi, Tsuzaki, Tomohiro, Sawa, Michiyoshi, Sanuki, Koshi, Makita, and Kiyoshi, Morita
- Subjects
Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Adolescent ,Cardiovascular Surgical Procedures ,Incidence ,Age Factors ,Infant ,Middle Aged ,Stroke ,Japan ,Anesthesiology ,Humans ,Female ,Child ,Intraoperative Complications ,Societies, Medical ,Aged - Abstract
The incidence of cerebrovascular accidents (CVA) developing in the operating theater has not been investigated on a large scale. In 2004, the Japanese Society of Anesthesiologists (JSA) started to survey neurological as well as life-threatening events in the operating theater. The incidence of CVA developing in the operating theater was examined using data obtained by the 2004 survey.JSA has conducted annual surveys of life-threatening and neurological events in the operating theater by sending and collecting confidential questionnaires to all JSA certified training hospitals. The recovery rate was 91% (874/960 hospitals) in 2004. Seven hundred fourteen hospitals sent valid responses, and 1,218,371 anesthesias were registered. Among these cases, 123 patients were reported to have developed CVA in the operating theater. Incidences according to age class, ASA PS and surgical sites, causes, and their outcome were investigated. The patients with ASA PS 1 or 2 were classified as having good physical status, and those with ASA PS 3-5 were classified as having poor physical status. The causes of events were classified as follows: totally attributable to anesthetic management (AM), mainly to intraoperative pathological events (IP), to preoperative co-morbidity (PC), and to surgical management (SM).Overall incidence of CVA was 1.01/10,000 anesthesias. The incidence in patients aged 66 years or above was 2.00/10,000 anesthesias, which was 3.83-(95% confidential interval 2.57-5.71) fold higher than that in patients aged between 19 and 65 years. The incidences in elective and emergency patients with poor physical status were 3.27 and 7.91/10,000 anesthesias, respectively, which was 7.04- (4.56-10.87) and 17.06-(10.90-26.69) fold higher than that in elective patients with good physical status, respectively. The incidences in patients undergoing thoracotomy combined with laparotomy, craniotomy, or cardiovascular surgery were 2.76, 5.96 and 11.65/10,000 anesthesias, respectively, which were 7.22- (1.64-31.76), 15.59- (8.14-29.86), and 30.52- (16.80-55.44) fold higher than that in patients undergoing laparotomy alone. Among cardiovascular surgery, thoracic aortic surgery showed the highest number of incidents (57.98/10,000 anesthesias), followed by on-pump coronary artery bypass (11.07/10,000 anesthesias). Only one patient undergoing off-pump coronary artery bypass developed CVA, resulting in an 8.14- (1.00-66.18) fold lower incidence of CVA compared to that of on-pump coronary artery bypass. AM, IP, PC and SM were responsible for 4.1%, 24.4%, 27.6% and 35.0% of CVA. The incidence of CVA caused by AM or IP was calculated to be 0.29/ 10,000 anesthesias. If patients undergoing cardiovascular surgery or craniotomy were excluded, the incidence of CVA caused by AM or IP was calculated to be 0.13/ 10,000 anesthesias (15/ 1,134,398 anesthesias). The overall outcome of CVA was as follows: uneventful recovery 9.8%, death within 30 post-operative days 26.0%, vegetative state 6.5%, and sequelae involving deficits in the central nervous system 52.0%. The outcome of CVA caused by AM or IP was as follows: uneventful recovery 20.0%, death within 30 post-operative days 22.9%, vegetative state 8.6%, or sequelae involving deficits in central nervous system 45.7%. Twenty-seven point six percent of reported CVA were considered to have been preventable.The overall incidence of CVA developing in the operating theater in Japan was reported to be 123 among 1.2 million anesthesias. The incidence was high in elderly patients, in patients with poor physical status, and in patients undergoing cardiovascular surgery. Because the prognosis of CVA developing in the operating theater was poor, clinical strategies for prevention, early detection, prompt diagnosis, and appropriate treatment of CVA should be established.
- Published
- 2007
43. [Survey of nerve injury associated with epidural/spinal anesthesia in Japan which occurred in the year 2004]
- Author
-
Kazuo, Irita, Hideki, Nakatsuka, Koichi, Tsuzaki, Tomohiro, Sawa, Michiyoshi, Sanuki, Koshi, Makita, and Kiyoshi, Morita
- Subjects
Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Anesthesia, Epidural ,Time Factors ,Incidence ,Anesthesia, Spinal ,Risk Assessment ,Spinal Puncture ,Perioperative Care ,Catheterization ,Japan ,Peripheral Nerve Injuries ,Humans ,Spinal Cord Injuries ,Aged - Abstract
The incidence of nerve injury associated with epidural/spinal anesthesia has not been sufficiently investigated in Japan.The incidence of nerve injury caused by inappropriate epidural/spinal puncture or catheter placement was examined using data obtained by a survey conducted by the Japanese Society of Anesthesiologists for the year 2004.In a survey for the year 2004, 1,218,371 anesthetic procedures were registered, among which 548,819 patients were estimated to be anesthetized under epidural/spinal procedures with or without general anesthesia. Twenty nine patients were reported to have incurred nerve injury due to inappropriate epidural/spinal puncture or catheter placement.Seven cases of spinal cord and 22 cases of peripheral nerve injury were reported, with estimated incidences of 1/78,000 and 1/25,000 procedures, respectively. Spinal cord injury developed before the start of surgery in 4 cases, intraoperatively in 1 case, and after the end of surgery in 2 cases. Permanent nerve damage developed in 4 patients with spinal cord injury and 7 patients with peripheral nerve injury. Eighty three percent of these events were reported to be preventable.The incidence of nerve injury caused by regional anesthesia in Japan seems to be comparable to those reported in the developed countries. To reduce the incidence of this complication, cautious evaluation of the risk/benefit balance in performing regional anesthesia, improving education and supervision of the procedures, and establishing better communication between anesthesiologists and surgeons concerning the timing of catheter removal and the postoperative coagulation state seem to be important.
- Published
- 2007
44. [The state of pediatric anesthesia in Japan: an analysis of the Japanese society of anesthesiologists survey of critical incidents in the operating room]
- Author
-
Kazuo, Irita, Koichi, Tsuzaki, Tomohiro, Sawa, Michiyoshi, Sanuki, Hideki, Nakatsuka, Koshi, Makita, and Kiyoshi, Morita
- Subjects
Risk ,Operating Rooms ,Risk Management ,Age Factors ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Hospitals, Pediatric ,Hospitals, University ,Survival Rate ,Japan ,Anesthesiology ,Child, Preschool ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Anesthesia ,Child ,Hospitals, Teaching ,Societies, Medical - Abstract
The Japanese Society of Anesthesiologists (JSA) survey of critical incidents in the operating room and other reports have shown that pediatric patients undergoing anesthesia are at an increased risk. Purpose was to examine the state of pediatric anesthesia in Japan. This might clarify the role of children's hospitals for pediatric anesthesia, and the relationship between critical incidents and volume of pediatric anesthetic procedures.The JSA has conducted annual surveys of critical incidents in the operating room by sending to and collecting confidential questionnaires from all JSA Certified Training Hospitals. From 1999 to 2003, 342,840 pediatric (0-5 yr) anesthetic procedures were registered. During this period, only 15 cardiac arrests and 3 deaths within 7 postoperative days totally attributable to anesthetic management were reported. Therefore, we analyzed cardiac arrests and deaths due to all etiologies. The hospitals were classified as children's hospitals, university hospitals, and other hospitals, and the incidence of cardiac arrest, the recovery rate from cardiac arrest without any sequelae, and the mortality rate were compared according to types of the hospitals. The relationship between death due to intraoperative critical incidents and the volume of pediatric anesthetic procedures was examined using data from the 2003 survey, the recovery rate of which was 85.7%. In 2003, 739 JSA Certified Training Hospitals responded to the survey: 7 children's hospitals, 109 university hospitals, and 623 other hospitals. Among these hospitals, 707 and 270 hospitals conducted pediatric and newborn (1 mo) anesthesia, respectively. In 2003, 4,630 newborn, 17,890 infant (1 yr), and 60,524 child (1-5 yr) anesthetic procedures were registered. Odds ratios were determined to compare the risks among the hospital groups, and the 95% confidential interval (CI) was shown. The Chi square test was used to compare the background of patients with cardiac arrest. P values less than 0.05 were considered significant.In 2003, 95.7% and 36.5% of JSA Certified Training Hospitals which responded to the survey had conducted pediatric and newborn anesthesia, respectively. Children's hospitals, university hospitals, and other hospitals were responsible for 10.7%, 31.0%, and 58.3% of pediatric anesthetic procedures, respectively. Seven children's hospitals (100.0%), 54 university hospitals (50.5%), and 54 other hospitals (9.1%) conducted more than 201 annual pediatric anesthetic procedures, respectively, and these 115 hospitals conducted 62.5% of all pediatric anesthetic procedures in Japan. There was no significant difference between the overall mortality rate in hospitals with an annual pediatric anesthetic volume of less than 200 and that in hospitals with an annual pediatric anesthetic volume of more than 201 (5.46 versus 7.12/10,000 anesthetic procedures). However, the overall mortality rate was 4.87 times higher (95% confidential interval: 1.53-15.66) in hospitals with an annual pediatric anesthetic volume of more than 101 (7.91/10,000 anesthetic procedures) than in those with an annual pediatric anesthetic volume of less than 100 (1.62/10,000 anesthetic procedures). The situation was quite different when we focused on newborn anesthetic procedures : the overall mortality was 2.63 times higher (95% confidential interval : 1.19-5.84) in hospitals with an annual newborn anesthetic volume of less than 12 (126.6/ 10,000 anesthetic procedures) than those with an annual newborn anesthetic volume of more than 13 (48.5/10,000 anesthetic procedures). Between 1999 and 2003, the incidences of cardiac arrest in children's hospitals, university hospitals, and other hospitals were 9.54 (1.89 times higher than the other hospitals; CI 1.31-2.67), 10.30, and 5.11/10,000 anesthetic procedures, respectively. Among the children who developed cardiac arrest, the ratio of poor preoperative conditions with an American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status classification of more than 3 was significantly lower in the children's hospitals (68.9%) than the university hospitals (84.3%) and the other hospitals (84.0%). The recovery rate from cardiac arrest was 51.1% (2.49 times higher than the university hospitals; CI 1.23-5.06, and 3.05 times higher than the other hospitals ; CI 1.45-6.43), 29.6%, and 25.5%, respectively. The mortality rate was 9.54 (1.77 times higher than the other hospitals; CI 1.25-2.52), 8.87, and 5.38/10,000 anesthetic procedures in children's hospitals, university hospitals and other hospitals, respectively.Almost all JSA Certified Training Hospitals conducted pediatric anesthesia, although only 15.6% of them had an annual pediatric anesthetic volume of more than 200. It was suggested that general pediatric anesthesia was conduced safely in JSA Certified Training Hospitals, even if they had a low annual pediatric anesthetic volume. The exception was newborn anesthetic procedures : the mortality was high in hospitals with an annual newborn anesthetic volume of less than 12. Analysis of critical incidents in the operating room failed to show the superiority of children's hospitals in comparison with the university hospitals and other hospitals. Collecting and analyzing data including the patients without critical incidents are required for further analysis.
- Published
- 2007
45. Perioperative Factors Associated With Chronic Central Pain After the Resection of Intramedullary Spinal Cord Tumor.
- Author
-
Yuki Onishi-Kato, Masaya Nakamura, Akio Iwanami, Masayoshi Kato, Takeshi Suzuki, Shizuko Kosugi, Nobuyuki Katori, Saori Hashiguchi, Koichi Tsuzaki, Junzo Takeda, Hiroshi Morisaki, Onishi-Kato, Yuki, Nakamura, Masaya, Iwanami, Akio, Kato, Masayoshi, Suzuki, Takeshi, Kosugi, Shizuko, Katori, Nobuyuki, Hashiguchi, Saori, and Tsuzaki, Koichi
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. [Critical events in the operating room among 1,440,776 patients with ASA PS 1 for elective surgery]
- Author
-
Kazuo, Irita, Yasuo, Kawashima, Kiyoshi, Morita, Norimasa, Seo, Yasuhide, Iwao, Koichi, Tsuzaki, Koshi, Makita, Yoshirou, Kobayashi, Michiyoshi, Sanuki, Tomohiro, Sawa, Hidefumi, Obara, and Akito, Omura
- Subjects
Operating Rooms ,Time Factors ,Incidence ,Coronary Vasospasm ,Respiration, Artificial ,Heart Arrest ,Japan ,Anesthesiology ,Elective Surgical Procedures ,Cause of Death ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Medication Errors ,Anesthesia ,Morbidity ,Hospitals, Teaching ,Pulmonary Embolism ,Societies, Medical - Abstract
The Japanese Society of Anesthesiologists (JSA) survey of critical incidents in the operating room has shown that preoperative complications are the leading causes of critical incidents, and affect the occurrence, severity and outcome of critical incidents which are due to causes other than preoperative complications. Causes of critical events in the operating room were examind in patients for elective surgery with American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status (ASA PS) 1.JSA has conducted annual surveys of critical incidents in the operating room by sending and collecting confidential questionnaires to all JSA Certified Training Hospitals. From 1999 to 2002, 3,855,384 anesthesia patients were registered. Among these, 1,440,776 patients with ASA PS 1 for elective surgery were analyzed. The causes of critical incidents were classified as follows: totally attributable to anesthetic management (AM), mainly to intraoperative pathological events (IP), to preoperative complications (PC), and to surgical management (SM). IP consists of coronary ischemia mainly due to coronary vasospasm, arrhythmias, pulmonary embolism, and other conditions.The incidences of cardiac arrest, critical incidents other than cardiac arrest and subsequent death were 9.86, 59.41 and 3.12 per 100,000 anesthesia cases, respectively. IP and SM were responsible for 36.6% and 34.5% of cardiac arrest, respectively. AM and SM were responsible for 46.7% and 26.8% of critical incidents other than cardiac arrest, respectively. SM, IP and AM were responsible for 66.7%, 22.2% and 4.4% of subsequent deaths (within 7 postoperative days), respectively. Coronary ischemia and pulmonary embolism were the main causes of death due to IP. The incidences of cardiac arrest and death totally attributable to AM were 1.87 and 0.14 per 100,000 anesthesia cases, respectively. Medication problems were responsible for 48.1% of arrests, while airway/ventilation problems were for 57.2% of critical incidents other than arrest. Human factors (SM combined with AM) were responsible for 53.5%, 73.5%, and 71.1% of cardiac arrest, critical incidents other than arrest and death, respectively.Even in elective patients with good physical status, non-lethal incidents were not rare, and lethal incidents were also reported. We should pay significant attention to the following findings, and take some measures to overcome these problems especially related to human factors. Firstly, SM badly harmed some operative patients. Secondly, coronary vasospasm and pulmonary embolism were the main causes of death due to IP. Thirdly, drug administration and airway/ventilation management were the major causes of critical incidents totally attributable to AM. Human factors were responsible for 70.6% of critical incidents and 71.1% of deaths.
- Published
- 2005
47. [Critical incidents during regional anesthesia in Japanese Society of Anesthesiologists-Certified Training Hospitals: an analysis of responses to the annual survey conducted between 1999 and 2002 by the Japanese Society of Anesthesiologists]
- Author
-
Kazuo, Irita, Yasuo, Kawashima, Kiyoshi, Morita, Norimasa, Seo, Yasuhide, Iwao, Koichi, Tsuzaki, Koshi, Makita, Yoshirou, Kobayashi, Michiyoshi, Sanuki, Tomohiro, Sawa, Hidefumi, Obara, and Akito, Oomura
- Subjects
Male ,Japan ,Data Collection ,Incidence ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Anesthesia ,Female ,Hospital Mortality ,Anesthesia, General ,Hospitals, Teaching ,Anesthesia, Local ,Heart Arrest - Abstract
Recently, a national survey in France including 35,439 patients who had received spinal anesthesia showed that the incidences of cardiac arrest and mortality associated with spinal anesthesia were 2.5 and 0.8 per 10,000 anesthetics, respectively. In this study, we investigated these values using data obtained from annual surveys conducted by the Japanese Society of Anesthesiologist (JSA).Since 1994, JSA has conducted annual surveys concerning critical incidents in the operating theater by sending confidential questionnaires to JSA-certified training hospitals, then collecting and analyzing the responses. We investigated critical incidents associated with regional anesthesia using data from annual surveys between 1999 and 2002. The questionnaire was identical in each survey conducted during these years. The total number of anesthetics available for this analysis was 3,855,384, of which spinal anesthesia, combined spinal-epidural anesthesia and epidural anesthesia were performed in 409,338, 146,282, and 69,001 patients, respectively. In patients receiving regional anesthesia, 628 critical incidents including 108 cardiac arrests, and 45 subsequent deaths were reported. The causes of critical incidents were classified as follows: totally attributable to anesthetic management, due mainly to intraoperative pathological events, preoperative complications, and surgical management. IP consists of coronary ischemia including coronary vasospasm not suspected preoperatively, arrhythmias including severe bradycardia, pulmonary thromboembolism, and other conditions. Mortality was determined by postoperative day 7. Statistical analysis was performed by chi-square test and Mann-Whitney test. A p value less than 0.05 was considered significant.The incidences of cardiac arrest and mortality due to all etiologies were 1.69 and 0.76 with spinal anesthesia, 1.78 and 0.68 with combined spinal-epidural anesthesia, and 1.88 and 0.58/10,000 anesthetics with epidural anesthesia, respectively. The incidences of cardiac arrest and mortality due to anesthetic management were 0.54 and 0.02 with spinal anesthesia, 0.55 and 0.00 with combined spinal-epidural anesthesia, and 0.72 and 0.14/10,000 anesthetics with epidural anesthesia, respectively. These values did not significantly differ among regional anesthesia. Death attributable to anesthetic management was reported in 2 patients: both patients were classified as ASA-PS 3 E, and developed cardiac arrest; one due to inadvertent high spinal anesthesia with spinal anesthesia, and the other due to local anesthetic intoxication with epidural anesthesia. Anesthetic management and intraoperative pathological events comprised 33 and 43% of cardiac arrests, respectively. The distribution of causes of death was as follows: anesthetic management, 5%; intraoperative pathological events, 34%; preoperative complications, 35%; surgical management, 26%. Among the causes of anesthetic management-induced critical incidents, inadvertent high spinal anesthesia was the leading cause of cardiac arrest in spinal and combined spinalepidural anesthesia: 90% of arrests occurred in patients with ASA-PS 1+2; 88% in patients below 65 years of age; 45 and 25% in patients undergoing hip or lower extremities surgery, and cesarean section, respectively. Among the causes of intraoperative pathological event-induced critical incidents, pulmonary thromboembolism was the leading cause of cardiac arrest in spinal and combined spinal-epidural anesthesia: 59% of arrests occurred in patients with ASA-PS 1+2; 81% in patients above 66 years of age; 91% in patients undergoing hip or lower extremity surgery.The incidence of cardiac arrest and mortality associated with spinal anesthesia in Japan was shown to be in the same order as in France by analyzing a larger population. In patients with good ASA-PS, critical incidents occurred more often under regional anesthesia than under general anesthesia. Inadvertent high spinal anesthesia should be carefully avoided. We should also pay much attention to subclinical deep vein thrombosis in patients who were scheduled for hip or lower extremity surgery, and tourniquet- or bone cement-associated pulmonary embolism in these patients.
- Published
- 2005
48. [Supplemental survey in 2003 concerning life-threatening hemorrhagic events in the operating room]
- Author
-
Kazuo, Irita, Yasuo, Kawashima, Kiyoshi, Morita, Norimasa, Seo, Yasuhide, Iwao, Michiyoshi, Sanuki, Tomohiro, Sawa, Yoshirou, Kobayashi, Kooshi, Makita, Koichi, Tsuzaki, Hidefumi, Obara, and Akito, Oomura
- Subjects
Patient Care Team ,Emergency Medical Services ,Operating Rooms ,Time Factors ,Incidence ,Hemorrhage ,Postoperative Hemorrhage ,Shock, Hemorrhagic ,Severity of Illness Index ,Japan ,Anesthesiology ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Workforce ,Humans ,Blood Transfusion ,Triage ,Hospitals, Teaching ,Intraoperative Complications ,Quality of Health Care - Abstract
We previously showed that pre-operative hemorrhagic shock and surgical hemorrhage were the major causes of life-threatening events in the operating room and subsequent fatality. We investigated the background of these events.The Subcommittee on Surveillance of Anesthesia-Related Critical Incidents, Japanese Society of Anesthesiologist (JSA) sent confidential questionnaires to all JSA-certified training hospitals (n=862). The questionnaires were composed of two parts: one for examining all life-threatening events in the operating room and the other for examining the background of massive hemorrhage in the operating room. The number of patients registered between January 1, 2003 and December 31, 2003 was 1,367,790 from 782 hospitals. Life-threatening hemorrhagic events were reported in 1,011 patients, of whom 876 patients were available for further analysis of the background of the events. Fatality within 7 postoperative days following these events was 45.4%.In patients who developed life-threatening events due to hemorrhage, 35.2% had blood loss of more than 12 l x 60 kg(-1) of body weight, 44.9% had a maximal hemorrhagic speed of more than 240 ml x min(-1) x 60 kg(-1) of body weight, and 39.1% had a minimal hemoglobin concentration of less than 5 g x dl(-1). The main sources of hemorrhage were as follows: the abdominal aorta, 15.4%; the thoracic aorta, 14.0%; the liver, 12.6%; intra-cranium, 8.2%; the pelvic organs, 8.0%; celiac or mesenteric artery, 7.8%; the lung, 7.1%. Of patients who developed life-threatening events due to preoperative hemorrhagic shock, 18.3% underwent cardiac massage preoperatively, 50.0% lost consciousness, 58.5% were intubated, and 16.4% were retrospectively judged to have had no operative indications. Human factors also affected the life-threatening events due to preoperative hemorrhagic shock: delayed decision making concerning indications for surgical treatment, 15.6%; delayed admission to the operating room, 16.6%; delayed supply of blood products, 25.5%; problems in surgical management, 16.3%; problems in anesthetic management, 28.1%. These problems in anesthetic management included shortage of supportive anesthesiologists. This was partly explained by the time of their admission to the operating room: 67.0% of the patients admitted during the week end or at night. Of the patients who developed life-threatening events due to surgical hemorrhage, 58.0% were predicted preoperatively to develop massive hemorrhage by anesthesiologists, and 66.7% were informed of the risks of massive hemorrhage and associated complications. The main causes of surgical hemorrhage were as follows: adhesion or invasion, 44.7%; and problems in surgical judgments or techniques, 43.7%. Anesthetic management affected the development of life-threatening events in these patients: lack of infusion prior to hemorrhage, shortage of supportive anesthesiologists, delay in ordering additional blood products, delayed judgment to start blood transfusion, and shortage of rapid infusion/transfusion apparatus. Delay for hospitals in obtaining blood supply from blood banks was reported in 13.0% of cases, and delayed supply from inhospital blood transfusion service to the operating room in 16.0%. Despite massive hemorrhage, ABO cross-matching was omitted only in 13.4% of patients, and transfusion of ABO-compatible, instead of ABO-identical red blood cells, was performed only in 1.3%.To reduce life-threatening hemorrhagic events in the operating theater, reorganization of emergency medical service and blood supply, improvement of surgical techniques, improved triage of patients with hemorrhagic shock, flexible application of compatible blood products in emergency situations, and improvement of the quality and number of anesthesiologists should be considered.
- Published
- 2005
49. [Surgical volume and mortality due to intraoperative critical incidents at Japanese Society of Anesthesiologists certified training hospitals: an analysis of the annual survey in 2002]
- Author
-
Kazuo, Irita, Yasuo, Kawashima, Koichi, Tsuzaki, Yasuhide, Iwao, Norimasa, Seo, Kiyoshi, Morita, Tomohiro, Sawa, Michiyoshi, Sanuki, Koshi, Makita, Yoshirou, Kobayashi, Hidefumi, Obara, and Akito, Oomura
- Subjects
Risk Management ,Japan ,Anesthesiology ,Incidence ,Humans ,Anesthesia ,Hospitals, Teaching ,Societies, Medical - Abstract
We have previously showed that surgical volume affects mortality due to intraoperative critical incidents among patients undergoing cardiac surgery, the surgery with the highest risk, using data obtained by the annual survey in 2001 conducted by the Japanese Society of Anesthesiologists (JSA). In this study, we investigated whether surgical volume affects mortality due to intraoperative critical incidents independent of the surgical site.We investigated this relationship using data obtained from the 2002 annual survey conducted by the Subcommittee on Surveillance of Anesthesia-related Critical Incidents, JSA. Between January 1, 2002 and December 31, 2002, 1,987,988 patients were registered from 704 training hospitals certified by the JSA. Intraoperative critical incidents occurred in 2,844 patients. Of these, 804 patients died within 7 postoperative days. The overall mortality was 4.61 per 10,000 anesthetics. Hospitals were divided into 5 groups according to their annual surgical cases: Group A, fewer than 1,000 (62 hospitals); Group B, 1,000-1,999 (204 hospitals); Group C, 2,000-3,999 (288 hospitals); Group D, 4,000-5,999 (110 hospitals); Group E, more than 6,000 (40 hospitals). Hospitals were also divided into 2 groups according to mortality: Group 1, under 20.00 per 10,000 anesthetics (672 hospitals); Group 2, equal to or higher than 20.00 per 10,000 anesthetics (32 hospitals). Total number of deaths in Group 2 was 158. Mortality was expressed as the mean (95% confidence interval). Statistical analysis was performed using chi-square test and Fisher test. A p value of0.05 was considered significant.The mortality rates in Groups A-E were 14.89 (8.48-21.3), 3.86 (3.05-4.67), 3.88 (3.19-4.57), 4.04 (3.20-4.88), and 3.12 (2.19-4.05) per 10,000 anesthetics, respectively. Average surgical cases and mortality in Group 1 were 2,789 (2,775-3,002) and 3.24 (2.90-3.58), respectively, while those in Group 2 were 1,672 (1,243-2,101) and 22.18 (30.58-45.94), respectively. If all patients in Group 2 (n=53,509) had been treated in the hospitals of Group 1, 139-143 deaths might have been avoided.Surgical volume was shown to affect mortality independent of the surgical site. Hospitals with low surgical volume should pay significant attention to improving surgical outcomes. These results also suggest that centralization or regionalization should be discussed from the perspective of socio-economical problems as well as patient safety.
- Published
- 2005
50. [Critical incidents due to drug administration error in the operating room: an analysis of 4,291,925 anesthetics over a 4 year period]
- Author
-
Kazuo, Irita, Koichi, Tsuzaki, Tomohiro, Sawa, Michiyoshi, Sanuki, Koji, Makita, Yoshiro, Kobayashi, Akito, Oomura, Yasuo, Kawashima, Yasuhide, Iwao, Norimasa, Seo, Kiyoshi, Morita, and Hidefumi, Obara
- Subjects
Operating Rooms ,Safety Management ,Japan ,Incidence ,Humans ,Medication Errors ,Drug Overdose ,Anesthetics ,Heart Arrest - Abstract
Wrong drugs, overdose of drugs, and incorrect administration route remain unsolved problems in anesthetic practice. We determined the incidence and outcome of drug administration error in the operating room of Japanese Society of Anesthesiologists Certified Training Hospitals.Data were obtained from annual surveys conducted by Japanese Society of Anesthesiologists between 1999 and 2002. There were 4,291,925 cases of anesthetic delivery for this analysis.Incidence of critical incidents due to drug administration error was 18.27/100,000 anesthetics. Cardiac arrest occurred in 2.21 patients per 100,000 anesthetics. Causes of these critical incidents were as follows: overdose or selection error involving non-anesthetic drugs, 42.1%; overdose of anesthetics, 28.7%; inadvertent high spinal anesthesia, 17.9%; local anesthetic intoxication, 6.4%; ampule or syringe swap, 4.3%; blood mismatch, 0.6%. Incidence of death following these incidents was 0.44/100,000. Causes of death were as follows: overdose or selection error involving non-anesthetic drugs, 47.4%; overdose of anesthetics, 26.3%; inadvertent high spinal anesthesia, 15.8%; local anesthetic intoxication, 5.3%. Ampule or syringe swap did not lead to any fatalities. Death following inadvertent high spinal anesthesia and local anesthetic intoxication was reported only in patients who had developed cardiac arrest. It should be noted that 88 percent of ampule or syringe swap occurred in patients with American Society of Anesthesiologists-Physical Status 1 or 2, who did not seem to require complex anesthetic management.We should increase awareness that drug administration is generally performed with limited objective monitoring, although "To error is human". Increased vigilance is required to avoid drug administration error in the operating room. Additional anesthesia resident education, adequate supervision, and improved organization are necessary. Bar-coding technology might be useful in preventing drug administration error.
- Published
- 2004
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.