Back to Search Start Over

Spinal anesthesia for lumbar spine surgery correlates with fewer total medications and less frequent use of vasoactive agents: A single center experience

Authors :
Timothy T. Houle
Jean-Valery Coumans
Hao Deng
Richard G.W. Anderson
Robert A. Peterfreund
Source :
PLoS ONE, Vol 14, Iss 6, p e0217939 (2019), PLoS ONE
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2019.

Abstract

Study objectiveAnesthesiologists at our hospital commonly administer spinal anesthesia for routine lumbar spine surgeries. Anecdotal impressions suggested that patients received fewer anesthesia-administered intravenous medications, including vasopressors, during spinal versus general anesthesia. We hypothesized that data review would confirm these impressions. The objective was to test this hypothesis by comparing specific elements of spinal versus general anesthesia for 1-2 level open lumbar spine procedures.DesignRetrospective single institutional study.SettingAcademic medical center, operating rooms.PatientsConsecutive patients (144 spinal and 619 general anesthesia) identified by automatic structured query of our electronic anesthesia record undergoing lumbar decompression, foraminotomy or microdiscectomy by one surgeon under general or spinal anesthesia.InterventionsSpinal or general anesthesia.MeasurementsNumbers of medications administered during the case.Main resultsAnesthesiologists administered in the operating room a total of 10 ± 2 intravenous medications for general anesthetics and 5 ± 2 medications for spinal anesthetics (-5, 95% CI -5 to -4, pConclusionsFor routine lumbar surgery in our cohort, spinal compared to general anesthesia was associated with significantly fewer drugs administered during a case and less frequent use of vasoactive agents. Safety implications include greater hemodynamic stability with spinal anesthesia along with reduced risks for medication error and transmission of pathogens associated with medication administration.

Details

ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLOS ONE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4c98374dc0ea287d3a839a0db2f30401