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Principles of anesthesia in cirrhotic patients

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Presentation on theme: "Principles of anesthesia in cirrhotic patients"— Presentation transcript:

1 Principles of anesthesia in cirrhotic patients
Jean Mantz, MD, PhD Professor of Anesthesia and Critical Care Chairman, Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care, Beaujon University Hospital INSERM U 676 University of Paris

2 Anesthesia and cirrhosis
Principles of perioperative management Anesthesia and cirrhosis in: Liver transplantation Liver resection Endoscopic procedures Conclusion

3 Cirrhotic patients: Risk factors for perioperative morbi-mortality Ziser et al Anesthesiology 1999; 90: 42-53 Risk factors Morbidity (%) 30 day mortality (%) 6 month mortality (%) Child-Pugh score C vs AB     42 15 31 Ascite 48 20 39 Renal failure 21 36 COPD 41 18 29 Preoperative sepsis 74 49 60 GI bleeding 70 12 23 ASA status 4 or 5 68 32 52 Major surgery (thoracic, voies biliary, abodminal, septic) Intraoperative hypotension 45 26 Cause other than PBC 33 14 24

4 Cirrhotic patients: Risk factors for perioperative morbi-mortality Ziser et al Anesthesiology 1999; 90: 42-53 Risk factors Morbidity (%) 30 day mortality (%) 6 month mortality (%) Child-Pugh score C vs AB     42 15 31 Ascite 48 20 39 Renal failure 21 36 COPD 41 18 29 Preoperative sepsis 74 49 60 GI bleeding 70 12 23 ASA status 4 or 5 68 32 52 Major surgery (thoracic, voies biliary, abodminal, septic) Intraoperative hypotension 45 26 Cause other than PBC 33 14 24

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6 Cirrhotic patients: Risk factors for perioperative morbi-mortality Ziser et al Anesthesiology 1999; 90: 42-53 Risk factors Morbidity (%) 30 day mortality (%) 6 month mortality (%) Child-Pugh score C vs AB     42 15 31 Ascite 48 20 39 Renal failure 21 36 COPD 41 18 29 Preoperative sepsis 74 49 60 GI bleeding 70 12 23 ASA status 4 or 5 68 32 52 Major surgery (thoracic, voies biliary, abodminal, septic) Intraoperative hypotension 45 26 Cause other than PBC 33 14 24

7 Venous compliance in cirrhosis Hadengue et al, Hepatology 1992
300 mL gélatine en 3 min

8 Fluid management Hypovolemia Fluid overload

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10 Preoperative risk evaluation
Circulatory (hyperkinetic profile with low SVR, high venous compliance, coronaropathy or cardiomoypathy, pulmonary hypertension) Ventilatory (Hypoxemia, intrapulmonary shunt, restrictive syndrome (ascite, pleural effusion)

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12 Preoperative risk evaluation
Circulatory (hyperkinetic profile with low SVR, high venous compliance, coronaropathy or cardiomoypathy, pulmonary hypertension) Ventilatory (Hypoxemia, intrapulmonary shunt, restrictive syndrome (ascite, pleural effusion) Renal (hypovolemia, hepatorenal syndrome) Cerebral (encephalopathy, cerebral edema) Coagulation (hypo-/ hypercoagulability, fibrinolysis) Pharmacokinetic/dynamic changes to drug effects

13 Choice of anesthetic agents/techniques
Risks of regional anesthesia Use intravenous anesthetics with elimination independent from cytochrome P450 activity (Propofol AIVOC, ketamine, etomidate, fentanyl, sufentanil, remifentanil, atracurium/cisatracurium) Volatile anesthetics: desflurane/sevoflurane Maintain hemodynamic stability +++ MONITOR and TITRATE+++

14 Patient Risk/benefit balance of anesthesia and surgery Anesthesiologist Surgeon Hepatologist/ Gastroenterologist

15 Intraoperative period
Short acting anesthetics Postoperative analgesia Prevention of PONV Reversal of muscle relaxants Maintenance of normovolemia, hemoglobin levels Prevention of awareness Maintenance of normothermia Maintain oxygenation Restrictive fluid therapy Avoid hyperglycemia Start postoperative rehabilitation

16 Intraoperative period
Short acting anesthetics Postoperative analgesia Prevention of PONV Reversal of muscle relaxants Maintenance of normovolemia, hemoglobin levels Prevention of awareness Maintenance of normothermia Maintain oxygenation Restrictive fluid therapy Avoid hyperglycemia Start postoperative rehabilitation

17 Cirrhosis and coagulation abnormalities
Antihemostatic Prohemostatic Thrombocytopenia Alteration of platelet functions  FvW and FVIII  Factors II, V, VII, IX, X, XI Abnormalities of fibrinogen  Protein C, protein S, protein Z, AT(III), heparin-CoFII, 2-macroglobulin  2-anti-plasmine, TAFI  t-PA  plasminogen  PAI-1 T. Lisman et al. J Hepatol 2002;37:280-7

18 Hepatology 2006,44:53-61

19 Coagulation abnormalities
Cirrhosis Coagulation abnormalities Hemorrhage

20 Coagulation abnormalities
Cirrhosis Coagulation abnormalities Portal hypertension ? Hemorrhage

21 Postoperative rehabilitation
Multimodal analgesia Early extubation Early removal of tubes and catheters Early mobilization Thromboprophylaxis Early enteral nutrition Hydratation

22 Postoperative rehabilitation
Multimodal analgesia Early extubation Early removal of tubes and catheters Early mobilization Thromboprophylaxis Early enteral nutrition Hydratation

23 Liver transplantation in Beaujon: recipients

24 (n=215) (n=212) (n=242) (n=77) (n=51)

25 Survival / indications
Cirrhosis (n=416) Others (n=72) HCC (n=248) Fulminans (n=139)

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28 Anesthesia for endoscopic procedures.
High risk anesthesia +++ Outside the OR Inhalation of gastric content Obstructive hypoxemia Hemorrhage and perforation Pulmonary hypertension

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30 Indications for endotracheal intubation
Esophageal varices treatment (inhalation risk+++) Radiofrequency (painful procedures) Other indications: Long duration procedure (> 1h)) Comorbidities (obesity, major ascite, diabetic dysautonomia)

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33 Conclusion Cirrhotic patients are at high risk of postoperative morbi-mortality Discuss the risk/benefit balance of surgery and anesthesia Maintain hemodynamic stability (monitor, titrate) There is no « minor » anesthesia

34 Thank you for your kind attention


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