Abstract:
Background. Hipercapnic ventilation during general anesthesia was a disputed topic for
researchers during last ten years. However there were observed potential beneficial effects of induced
mild hypercapnia during the anesthesia on intraoperative and postoperative outcome: lower necessity in
opioids, reducing the rate of wound infections,, accelerated wound healing.
AIM. Estimation of the effects of intraoperative induced mild hypercapnia (ETCO2=45-50
mmHg), on postoperative recovery after laparoscopic colecistectomy.
Materials and methods. Prospective randomized study (normocapnic lot, n=42; hypercapnic
lot, n=58), written informed consent. Positive agreement of Ethics Committee. Anesthesia: induction –
propofol, fentanyl, maintenance – sevofluran, relaxants – tracrium. Statistics: t-Student, Fisher exact
test, Mantel-Cox test and ANOVA.
Results. Similar lots in terms of age, BMI, ASA, surgery and hospitalization period. Hypercapnic
lot vs. normocapnic lot: length of awakening from anesthesia – median, 15 vs. 20 min (χ2=12,6;
p<0,0001); postoperative ileus period – median, 28 vs. 30 hours (χ2=10,8; p=0,001); PONV risk, in
favor of hypercapnic lot – OR=0,50 (95CI=0,24-1,05), p=0.0695. Neurocognitive tests (DCT, DSST,
Wechsler, Stroop), similar resuls for both lots and for the pre and postoperative periods. Study limits:
reduced sample, short period of surgery, mild hypercapnia.
Conclusions: The results of our research show a reduced period of awake after anesthesia, also
a reduced period of ileus, and a minimized PONV risk, after laparoscopic cholecystectomy with induced
mild hipercapnia with no hemodinamic and neurocognitive side effects.
Description:
Nicolae Testemitanu State University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Chisinau, Republic of Moldova, The 6th International Medical Congress for Students and Young Doctors, May 12-14, 2016