710 likes | 2.92k Views
Anesthetic concerns in rheumatoid arthritis. Dr. S. Parthasarathy MD., DA., DNB, MD ( Acu ), Dip. Diab.DCA, Dip. Software statistics PhD ( physio ) Mahatma gandhi medical college and research institute, puducherry , India. History. 400 BC ‘ gout’ was used to describe all types of
E N D
Anesthetic concerns in rheumatoid arthritis Dr. S. Parthasarathy MD., DA., DNB, MD (Acu), Dip. Diab.DCA, Dip. Software statistics PhD (physio) Mahatma gandhi medical college and research institute, puducherry, India
History • 400 BC ‘gout’ was used to describe all types of arthritis. • Jacob in 1800 ==== described rheumatoid arthritis (RA) as asthenic gout
Introduction • Symmetrical polyarthropathy and significant systemic involvement • 1 % incidence • Females preponderance • 30 – 55 years • HLA DR 4 association in 70% • RA seropositive in 80 % cases • Viral, bacterial, environmental factors, smoking
Clinical features • Rheumatoid arthritis is a heterogeneous inflammatory arthritis. • Typical presentation is with persistent, painful joint swelling with morning stiffness • MCP and proximal Interphaleangeal joints affected. ( DIP spared ) • The course of the disease is characterized by exacerbations and remissions
Before that • Fever • Fatigue, • Malaise • Skeletal and muscle pain • Phase of Synovial inflammation
Atlantoaxialsubluxation (AAS) • Anterior • Posterior • Vertical • Lateral
Management of rheumatoid arthritis • Symptom relief ↖ • Para , NSAIDs, weak opioids , steroids • Regress the disease process ↙ • Disease modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARDs),
DMARDs • Methotrexate– antimetabolite • 5 or 10 mg once a week • GI toxicity, liver , myelosuppression can occur • Leflunamide, hydroxychloroquine, sulfasalazine, azathioprine • Liver, kidney, ILD, hypertension, pneumonia
Anti TNF alpha • Infliximab • Adalimumab • Etanercept • Certolizumab
Preoperative assessment • Surgeries Related Unrelated
Airway assessment • assess the range of neck flexion and extension • TMJ mobility and mouth opening • Preoperative cervical spine – ?? No guidelines • Cervical Spine Radiographs in Patients With Rheumatoid Arthritis Undergoing Anesthesia • JCR: Journal of Clinical Rheumatology & Volume 18, Number 2, March 2012
Airway • Cricoarytenoid arthritis – hoarseness , voice changes, stridor, URTI • Laryngeal amyloidosis and rheumatoid nodules may also cause obstruction • Preoperative nasendoscopy Anaesthesiologist decides doughnut head ring with a large enough hole to accommodate the occiput – described
Consider during anaesthesia- airway • 1 Using a facemask or supraglottic airway device. (Intubating LMA) • 2 Using the smallest internal diameter tracheal tube possible. • 3 Avoiding trauma at intubation • MRI c spine • In emergency – consider as unstable
Airway • The Bellhouse technique (angle from the neutral head position to extreme extension, without moving the neck) of assessing the occipito-atlanto-axial (OAA) extension capacity may be unreliable due to compensatory subaxial extension
Systemic illness • Cardiovascular • 50 % of mortality in RA • Pericarditis, aortic regurgitation, arrhythmias • vasculitis – coronary • ECG , ECHO
Cardiovascular • Myocarditis, amyloidosis, • Granulomatous disease • Endocarditis • Left ventricular failure • Evaluate even in young patients • CVS risk same as diabetes mellitus
Respiratory system • respiratory investigations (chest radiographs, arterial blood gases and lung function tests) due to the possibility of pulmonary involvement (fibrosis, nodules, effusions) Respiratory myopathy. • Restrictive defect , • Reduced chest wall compliance (costochondral disease) • Reduction in gas exchange and exercise-induced hypoxemia
Renal system • Subclinical renal dysfunction is commonly seen in rheumatoid arthritis patients. • One study • 11% had proteinuria, 10% had deficient urinary concentration, and 8% had reduced glomerular filtration. • Routine renal function tests to be done
Neurological and ocular • Peripheral neuropathy • Autonomic dysfunction • Kerato-conjunctivitis • Apply Methylcellulose eye – • 15% of patients with RA • Peripheral vasculitis and Raynaud’s phenomenon • ( temperature monitoring )
Clotting • hypercoaguable state • due to • 1. Increased plasma levels of fibrinogen, von Willebrand factor, plasminogen activator inhibitor, and other acute phase reactants, • 2. direct vascular injury due to dyslipidemia associated with glucocorticoid therapy or rheumatoid vasculitis
HB and blood grouping • Anaemia is common anaemia of chronic disease (normocytic, normochromic) • Drugs ?? • gastrointestinal haemorrhage, • myelosuppression. • Parenteral iron ?? • The preoperative haemoglobin should be brought to at least 10.0 gm for elective surgery = blood answer !!
Steroids • Patients taking more than 10 mg prednisolone per day should be given appropriate perioperative steroid cover. • Fragile veins makes peripheral venous access unreliable and central venous access is often difficult due to neck deformity
Drugs • Corticosteroids cause insulin resistance, hypertension, hypercholesterolaemia and hypertriglyceridaemia • NSAIDs- bleeding?? • Methotrexate – myelosupression, liver toxicity • All drugs to continue ?? Even TNF alpha antagonists ?? • Infection – but recent studies okays continuing • Metoclopramide – careful dosage .
Regional anaesthesia – consider • It avoids airway manipulation, • good postoperative pain relief, reduces polypharmacy. • Catheter techniques may be used for effective postoperative analgesia • Technically difficult due to spinal arthritis and loss of anatomical landmarks from contractures or deformities. • direct invasion of nerve by rheumatoid nodules • A higher than normal level in spinal
General anaesthesia- airway • USE LMA if possible • FOL or video laryngoscopes ready • A surgical tracheostomy under local anaesthesia may be indicated in emergency situations and in patients who have symptoms of upper airway obstruction
General anaesthesia • Nitrous oxide and methotrexate ?? – • air -O2 – agent • Positioning in fragile patients • Opioids – ok • Blood glucose and antibiotics , asepsis • Tourniquets even three – used
Airway in extubation • Considering the use of an airway exchange catheter at extubation. • Extubating in a suitable environment and at the appropriate time (obstruction often develops some time after extubation). • In severe cases, a pre-operative tracheostomy may be required.
Beware of IV FLUIDS • Rheumatoid patients are often slight of build, and frequently adults may weigh only 35 kg or less. Routine adult fluid balance orders may precipitate a dilutionalhyponatremia and water intoxication with overt convulsive manifestations.
Postoperative pain • No PCA – difficult to use for patients – joints affected. • Parenteral narcotics – √ • Paracetomol -- √ • Epicath -- √ • Physiotherapy – lungs !!, spine fixed !! • renal function monitoring • Post op renal failure in otherwise healthy RA !!
Summary • What is it ?? Incidence ?? • Drugs • Preoperative concerns ( airway and systems) • Intra operative concerns • Post op pain control • Post op physiotherapy and renal monitoring