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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12710/12693
Title: Hemodynamic stability of the opioid free anesthesia versus tiva anesthesia techinque in minimum invasive gynecological surgery: pilot study
Authors: Manastirschi, Stanislav
Keywords: opioid free anesthesia;TIVA;hemodynamic stability;minimally invasive surgery
Issue Date: Oct-2020
Publisher: Universitatea de Stat de Medicină şi Farmacie "Nicolae Testemiţanu"
Abstract: Introduction General anesthesia is based on 3 major components: hypnosis, muscular relaxation and antinociception. Principal intraoperator index of suficient antinociception is hemodinamic stability (HR & BP), which can be objectively majuried during surgery. Historicaly antinociception were achived by using of opioids (act on enkephalinic system), which have a lot of adverse effects (PONV, ileus, hyperalgesia, opioid tolerance). The general intravenous anesthesia technique without opioids (OFA) has been developed and studied since 2015. The expected benefit is avoidance of immediate and lasting adverse effects of opioids, while maintaining the quality and safety of the classic TIVA techinque of anesthesia. In OFA antinociception is achived by using of Lidocaine (acts on VGSC, muscarinic cholin-ergic and NMDA receptors), Dexmedetomedine (acts on alpha-2 adrenergic receptors), MgSO4 (NMDA receptors), Ketamine (NMDA receptors) and NSAIDs (inhibits COX-1 or COX-2). Purpose Comparison of intraoperative hemodynamic stability in gynecologic minimally invasive surgery, provided by TIVA versus OFA anesthesia techniques. Material and Methods Prospective, randomized study. Research Ethics Committee approved. Signed informed agreement. The basic hemodynamic parameters were recorded: systolic (SBP), diastolic (DBP) and mean (MAP) blood pressure, heart rate (HR). Statistical test: t-Student unpaired bicaudal. Statistical software: IBM SPSS Statistics v. 22. Data are presented as avarage value and standard deviation Results 47 young adult patients ASA I-II admited for scheduled interventions (22 - TIVA, 25 – OFA) enroled. OFA vs. TIVA. SBP=122.1±11.7 mmHg vs. 124.2±11.7 mmHg (p=0.57);DBP = 82,2±8,9 mmHg vs. 81,7±9,0 mmHg (p=0,759); MAP=94.2±8.1 mmHg and 94.6±9.9 mmHg respectively (p = 0.9); HR=74.6±11.3 bpm vs. 80.1±9.1 bpm (p = 0.096). Adverse haemodynamic events (deviations ± 15% from pre-induction period) were not observed. Conclusion The OFA anesthesia technique ensures an intraoperative hemodynamic stability similar to the TIVA anesthesia technique. OFA can be considered a safe anesthesia technique from this point of view.
URI: http://repository.usmf.md/handle/20.500.12710/12693
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