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Perioperative Cardiovascular Evaluation for Noncardiac Surgery. By :Mahmoud M Othman MD, Prof of Anesthesia & SICU, Mansoura faculty of Medicine. General Approach. Team Work Patient Primary care physician Anesthesiologist Surgeon Medical consultant. Preoperative Clinical Evaluation.
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Perioperative Cardiovascular Evaluation for Noncardiac Surgery By :Mahmoud M Othman MD, Prof of Anesthesia & SICU, Mansoura faculty of Medicine.
General Approach • Team Work • Patient • Primary care physician • Anesthesiologist • Surgeon • Medical consultant
Preoperative Clinical Evaluation • Identification of serious cardiac disorder • CAD, CHF, Arrhythmias (Initial history, Physical examination, ECG) • Define disease severity, stability, and prior treatment • Functional capacity • Age • Comorbid conditions (DM, peripheral vascular disease, renal dysfunction, chronic pulmonary disease) • Type of surgery • Consider higher risk • vascular procedures • prolonged complicated thoracic, abdominal and head and neck procedures
Further Preoperative Testing to Assess Coronary Risk CAD is the most frequent cause of perioperative cardiac mortality and morbidity after noncardiac surgery • Step-wise Bayesian strategy clinical markers prior coronary evaluation and treatment functional capacity surgery-specific risk
Stepwise Approach to Preoperative Cardiac Assessment Postoperative risk stratification and risk factor management Need for noncardiac surgery emergency O.R. no Urgent or elective Recurrent symptoms or signs Coronary revascularization within 5 yrs yes yes no yes Recent coronary angiogram or stress test? Recent coronary evaluation favorable result and no change in symptoms O.R. Unfavorable result and change in symptoms no Clinical predictors Major Intermediate Minor or No
Major clinical predictors delay or cancel noncardiac surgery Coronary angiography Medical management and risk factor modification Subsequent care dictated by findings and treatment results Stepwise Approach to Preoperative Cardiac Assessment • Major clinical predictors • Unstable coronary syndromes • Decompensated CHF • Significant arrhythmias • Severe valvular disease
Intermediate clinical predictors Moderate or excellent (>4METs) Poor (<4METs) High surgical risk precedure Low surgical risk procedure Intermediate or low surgical precedure Noninvasive testing Low risk Postoperative risk stratification and risk factor reduction O.R. High risk Consider coronary angiography Subsequent care dictated by findings and treatment results Stepwise Approach to Preoperative Cardiac Assessment • Intermediate clinical predictors • Mild angina pectoris • Prior MI • Compensated or prior CHF • DM
Stepwise Approach to Preoperative Cardiac Assessment Minor or no clinical predictors Poor(<4METs) Moderate or excellent(>4METs) High surgical risk procedure Intermediate surgical risk procedure low risk Noninvasive testing O.R. Postoperative management High risk • Minor clinical predictors • Advanced age • Abnormal ECG • Rhythm other than sinus • Low functional capacity • History of stroke • Uncontrolled systemic hypertension Consider coronary angiography Subsequent care by findings and treatment results
Clinical Predictors of Increased Perioperative Cardiovascular Risk(Myocardial Infarction, Congestive Heart Failure, Death) • Major Unstable coronary syndromes • Recent myocardial infarction with evidence of important ischemic risk by clinical symptoms or noninvasive study • Unstable or severe angina(Canadian Cardiovascular Society Class III or IV) Decompensated CHF Significant arrhythmias • High grade atrioventricular block • Symptomatic ventricular arrhythmias in the presence of underlying heart disease • Supraventricular arrhythmias with uncontrolled ventricular rate Severe valvular disease
Clinical Predictors of Increased Perioperative Cardiovascular Risk(Myocardial Infarction, Congestive Heart Failure, Death) • Intermediate Mild angina pectoris(Canadian Cardiovascular Society Class I or II) Prior myocardial infarction by history or pathological waves Compensated or prior CHF DM • Minor Advanced age Abnormal EKG(LVH, LBBB, ST-T abnormalities) Rhythm other than sinus(eg, atrial fibrillation) Low functional capacity(eg, unstable to climb one flight or stairs with a bag of groceries) History of stroke Uncontrolled systemic hypertension
Estimated Energy Requirements for Various Activities Can you take care of yourself? Eat. Dress, or use the toilet? Walk indoors around the house? Walk a block or two on level ground at 2-3 mphor 3.2-4.8 km/hr Do light work around the house dusting or washing dishes? 4 METs 1 MET Climb a flight of stairs or walk up a hill Walk on level ground at 4 mph or 6.4 km/h? Run a short distance? Do heavy work around the house like scrubbing floors or moving heavy furniture? Participate in moderate recreational activities like golf, bowling, dancing, doubles tennis, or throwing a baseball or football? Participate in strenuous sports like swimming, singles tennis, football, basket ball, or skiing 4 METs >10 METs
Cardiac Event Risk† Stratification for Noncardiac Surgical Procedures • High • (reported cardiac risk often >5%) • Emergent major operations, particularly in the elderly • Aortic and other major vascular • Peripheral vascular • Anticipated prolonged surgical procedures associated with large fluid shifts and/or blood loss • Intermediate • (Reported cardiac risk generally <5%) • Carotid endarterectomy • Head and neck • Intraperitoneal and intrathoracic • Orthopedic • Prostatic • Low‡ • (reported cardiac risk generally <1%) • Endoscopic procedures • Superficial procedures • Cataract • Breast † Combind incidence of cardiac death and nonfatal myocardial infarction ‡ Further preoperative cardiac testing is not generally required.
Method of Assessing Cardiac Risk • Resting Left Ventricular Function • Exercise Stress Testing • Pharmacological Stress Testing • Ambulatory ECG monitoring • Coronary Angiography
Method of Assessing Cardiac Risk • Resting Left Ventricular Function • Increased risk: • Ejection fraction < 35% • severe diastolic dysfunction • CHF • prior CHF or dyspnea of unknown etiology
Method of Assessing Cardiac Risk • Exercise Stress Testing • treadmill or bicycle stress and ECG analysis, echocardiography • degree of functional incapacity, symptoms of ischemia, severity of ischemia(depth, time of onset, duration of ST depression), evidence of hemodynamic or electrical instability correlated with increasing ischemic risk
Method of Assessing Cardiac Risk • Pharmacological Stress Testing • for patients who are unable to exercise • Dipyridamole or adenosine with thallium myocardial perfusion imaging • Dobutamine echocardiography • Ambulatory ECG Monitoring • Coronary Angiography
Indications for Coronary Angiography in Perioperative Evaluation Before (or After) Noncardiac Surgery Class I:Patients with suspected or proven CAD • High-risk results during noninvasive testing • Angina pectoris unresponsive to adequate medical therapy • Most patient with unstable angina pectoris • Nondiagnostic or equivocal noninvasive test in a high-risk noncardiac surgical procedure Class I: conditions for which there is evidence for and/or general agreement that a procedure or a treatment is of benefit
Indications for Coronary Angiography in Perioperative Evaluation Before (or After) Noncardiac Surgery Class II: • Intermediate-risk results during noninvasive testing • Nondiagnostic or equivocal noninvasive test in a lower-risk patients undergoing a high-risk noncardiac surgical procedure • Urgent noncardiac surgery in a patient convalescing from acute MI • Perioperative MI Class II: conditions for which there is a divergence of evidence and/or opinion about the treatment
Indications for Coronary Angiography in Perioperative Evaluation Before (or After) Noncardiac Surgery Class III: • Low-risk noncardiac surgery in a patient with known CAD and low-risk results on noninvasive testing • Screening for CAD without appropriate noninvasive testing • Asymptomatic after coronary revascularization, with excellent exercise capacity(>7METs) • Mild stable angina in patients with good LV function, low-risk noninvasive test results • Patient is not a candidate for coronary revascularization because of concomitant medical illness • Prior technically adequate normal coronary angiogram within previous 5years • Severe LV dysfunction(e.g., EF<20%) and patient not considered candidate for revascularization procedure • Patient unwilling to consider coronary revascularization procedure Class III: conditions for which there is evidence and/or general agreement that the procedure is not necessary
Management of Preoperative Cardiovascular Conditions • Hypertension • Valvular Heart Disease • Myocardial Heart Disease • Arrhythmias and Conduction Abnormalities
Management of Preoperative Cardiovascular Conditions • Hypertension • Severe HBP(DBP >110) should be controlled before surgery when possible • Continuation of preoperative antihypertensive treatment is critical to avoid severe postoperative hypertension. • Consider the urgency of surgery and the potential benefit of more intensive medical therapy.
Management of Preoperative Cardiovascular Conditions • Valvular Heart Disease • Symptomatic stenotic lesions(MS or AS): associated with risk of perioperative severe CHF or shock and often require percutaneous valvotomy or replacement to lower cardiac risk. • Symptomatic regurgitant lesions(AR or MR): usually better tolerated perioperatively and may be stabilized before surgery with intensive medical therapy and monitoring
Management of Preoperative Cardiovascular Conditions • Myocardial Heart Disease • Dilated and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy are associated with an increased incidence of perioperative CHF. • Maximizing preoperative hemodynamic status and providing intensive postoperative medical therapy and surveillance.
Management of Preoperative Cardiovascular Conditions • Arrhythmias and Conduction Abnormalities • careful evaluation for underlying cardiopulmonary disease, drug toxicity, or metabolic abnormality. • Therapy: reverse any underlying cause and treat the arrhythmia
Preoperative Coronary Revascularization • Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Surgery • Coronary Angioplasty
Medical Therapy for Coronary Artery Disease • If patients require beta-blockers, calcium channel blockers, or nitrates before surgery, continue them into the operative and post-op period. • The same is true for therapies used to control CHF • Beta-blockers reduce postoperative ischemia, • Protection against ischemia may also reduce risk of MI
Anesthetic Considerations • Anesthetic agent • No one best myocardial protective anesthetic technique. • Opioid:cardiovascular stability, but need postoperative ventilation • Inhalational agent: myocardial depression • Neuraxial block: sympathetic blockade low level:minimal hemodynamic change abdominal operation: profound effects(hypotension, reflex tachycardia)
Anesthetic Considerations • Perioperative pain management • PCA(iv or epidural) leads to a reduction in postoperative catecholamine surges and hypercoagulability, both of which can theoretically impact myocardial ischemia.
Anesthetic Considerations • Intraoperative nitroglycerine • Helpful or harmful vasodilating properties of NTG with anesthetics can cause significant hypotension and even myocardial ischemia. • Transesophageal echocardiography • Guidelines for the use of TEE to diagnosis or guide therapy are being developed by ASA
Perioperative Surveillance • Pulmonary artery catheters • recent MI complicated by CHF • significant CAD with procedures assoc. with significant hemodynamic stress. • Systolic or diastolic LV dysfunction • cardiomyopathy • valvular disease with high risk operation
Perioperative Surveillance • Intraoperative and postoperative ST monitoring • Intraoperative and postoperative ST changes are strong predictors of perioperative MI in patients at high risk who undergo noncardiac surgery • proper use of computerized ST-segment analysis may improve sensitivity for detection of myocardial ischemia
Perioperative Surveillance • Surveillance for perioperative MI • Clinical symptoms • Postoperative ECG changes • CK-MB, troponin-I, troponin-T, CK-MB isoforms • In patients with known or suspected CAD undergoing high risk procedures, obtaining ECG at baseline, immediately after the procedure, and for the first 2 postoperative days appears to be cost effective • Use of cardiac enzymes is best reserved for patients with clinical, ECG, or hemodynamic evidence of cardiovascular dysfunction.
Postoperative Therapy and Long-Term Management • Postoperative management should include assessment and management of modifiable risk factors for CAD, heart failure, HBP, stroke, and other cardiovascular diseases. • Assessment for hypercholesterolemia, smoking, hypertension, DM, physical inactivity, peripheral vascular disease, cardiac murmur(s), arrhythmias, perioperativeischemia, and MI may lead to evaluation and treatments that reduce future cardiovascular risk