Imagen de portada del programa Optimal Anesthesia by RENNY

Optimal Anesthesia by RENNY

Podcast de Optimal Anesthesia by RENNY

inglés

Tecnología y ciencia

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba.Cancela cuando quieras.

  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • Podcast gratuitos
Prueba gratis

Acerca de Optimal Anesthesia by RENNY

Anesthesia Academics

Todos los episodios

210 episodios

episode Inside the Autistic Brain artwork

Inside the Autistic Brain

Introduction Every anesthesiologist has encountered a patient whose reactions appear “disproportionate” to the situation— a child who fights the mask with surprising strength, an adult who becomes silent or withdrawn without warning, a teenager whose pain expression feels puzzlingly out of sync with clinical findings. These are not behavioral quirks. These are neurobiological signatures of the autistic brain. Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) represents a distinct neurodevelopmental configuration. Its sensory pathways, predictive systems, autonomic responses, and neurochemical networks follow patterns that differ from neurotypical physiology. For anesthesia practice, this means that the perioperative environment, transitions, communication, and drug effects interact differently with this neurobiology. The goal of this chapter is to integrate basic science, clinical fundamentals, and compassionate practice into a coherent framework that is academically rigorous yet deeply human-centered. PART I: FOUNDATIONS — THE AUTISTIC BRAIN THROUGH A CLINICAL PHYSIOLOGY LENS 1. Predictive Coding: The Architecture That Governs Stress and Cooperation The brain is fundamentally a prediction engine. It continually attempts to minimize “prediction error”—the mismatch between expected and actual sensory input. In ASD: * Predictions are narrower and more precise. * Incoming sensory data carries more weight. * Small mismatches produce disproportionately large autonomic responses. Clinical meaning Unannounced touch, sudden mask placement, or abrupt movement triggers limbic activation, cortisol release, and sympathetic surges—not because the patient is “difficult,” but because the predictive model has been violated. Understanding this transforms clinical care: the anesthesiologist’s greatest asset is not pharmacology, but predictability. 2. Sensory Hyperacuity: High-Gain Input in a Low-Noise System Many autistic individuals experience an amplified sensory world: * Visual cortex shows stronger responses to light. * Auditory cortex exhibits heightened gain for sudden sounds. * Tactile pathways show reduced habituation. * Thalamic filtering is less efficient. This creates a bandwidth–noise imbalance: the sensory system receives too much high-fidelity data and too little suppression. CLINICAL CONSEQUENCES * A cold stethoscope feels disproportionately painful. * The OR’s beeping monitors accumulate into overwhelming auditory load. * Bright overhead lights “flood” visual cortex and increase stress. * Light touch (mask, ECG electrodes) may be perceived as intrusive or threatening. This is why sensory-adapted anesthetic care is not a courtesy—it is physiology-driven medicine. 3. Autonomic Nervous System: The Fragile Symmetry of Arousal Autonomic instability is one of the most clinically relevant aspects of ASD. Neurophysiological studies reveal: * Lower baseline vagal tone * Exaggerated sympathetic surges * Slower return to autonomic baseline after distress * Heightened amygdala–locus coeruleus signaling loops CLINICAL RELEVANCE Expect: * Tachycardia during mask induction * Hypertension with environmental overstimulation * Movement in response to unexpected touch * Prolonged agitation during emergence Managing autistic patients is managing autonomic physiology as much as anesthetic depth. 4. Neurochemical Architecture: A Mechanistic Guide to Pharmacology GABA–Glutamate Balance Altered inhibitory–excitatory ratios explain: * Paradoxical reactions to benzodiazepines * Increased cortical excitability * Variable sensitivities to inhalational agents Dopaminergic Circuits Narrow reward prediction windows → distress during transitions or unexpected changes. Serotonergic Systems Altered novelty processing → increased anxiety in unfamiliar settings. Oxytocin Signaling Differences in social salience detection → difficulties interpreting clinician intention. Endogenous Opioid Tone Typical nociception but atypical pain expression. These neurochemical traits guide the anesthesiologist’s drug choices, titration strategy, and expectations during perioperative care. PART II: WHY ASD DEMANDS SPECIAL ATTENTION IN CLINICAL ANESTHESIA 1. Increasing Prevalence Across Ages and Contexts Autistic patients present in: * Pediatric surgery * Endoscopy and imaging sedation * Obstetric anesthesia * Trauma care * Neurosurgery * ICU extubation scenarios * Pain clinics This ubiquity demands a unified, science-grounded approach. 2. Core Traits Directly Influence Anesthetic Physiology * Sensory hypersensitivity alters mask acceptance and induction. * Autonomic lability increases hemodynamic volatility. * Atypical pain expression risks under-treatment. * Neurochemical variability modifies anesthetic drug response. No other neurodevelopmental condition intersects with anesthesia this profoundly. 3. Behavior is Biology Combative behavior is often sensory overload. Withdrawal is frequently autonomic shutdown. Resistance to procedures reflects prediction error. Agitation during emergence can be cortical flooding. Viewing these through a mechanistic lens improves both safety and empathy. PART III: PREOPERATIVE PREPARATION — THE PHASE THAT DETERMINES SUCCESS 1. The Sensory–Behavior Map (SBM) A structured preoperative interview with caregivers reveals: * Sensory triggers * Calming modalities * Communication preferences * Previous anesthesia responses * Mask/IV tolerance patterns * Rituals that ease transitions This becomes the anesthetic equivalent of a precision-medicine profile. 2. Environmental Modification — A Neurophysiologic Intervention Neuroscience shows that sensory overload activates the amygdala and lowers vagal tone. Thus: * Dim lights * Reduce auditory clutter * Warm surfaces * Use private preop bays * Minimize personnel turnover * Permit noise-canceling headphones or weighted blankets These micro-adjustments produce macro effects in autonomic stability. 3. Language That Regulates the Nervous System Use literal, stepwise language: * “I am going to place this on your arm now.” * “The mask will come near your face in three seconds.” Avoid metaphors and ambiguity. The autistic brain processes language with higher precision and lower tolerance for conceptual vagueness. PART IV: INDUCTION — THE MOST PHYSIOLOGICALLY VULNERABLE MOMENT 1. Pharmacology Through Basic Science DEXMEDETOMIDINE α2 agonism at the locus coeruleus: → calm sedation → autonomic stabilization → smooth emergence KETAMINE NMDA antagonism: → preserved airway reflexes → effective in sensory defensiveness → stable hemodynamics MIDAZOLAM GABA-A agonism: → useful but unpredictable → risk of paradoxical excitation CLONIDINE Sympatholytic, anxiolytic, resource-friendly. 2. Induction Pathways Built Around Sensory and Autonomic Science * Inhalational Induction Use when mask tolerance exists or can be shaped gradually. * IV induction Use when facial hypersensitivity or mask-related trauma exists. * Non-contact induction Critical for individuals with severe tactile defensiveness. 3. The Single Voice Rule Multiple simultaneous voices constitute sensory overload. A single, calm voice reduces prediction error and sympathetic activation. PART V: INTRAOPERATIVE MANAGEMENT — PRECISION AND STABILITY 1. Managing Autonomic Volatility * Titrate slowly * Anticipate surges before painful steps * Maintain steady environmental conditions * Warm the OR * Avoid rapid positional changes This is autonomic-guided anesthesia. 2. Pain Physiology and ASD Pain is often expressed atypically: freezing, echolalia, repetitive behavior, aggression, withdrawal. Interpretation must combine: * Vitals * Behavioral cues * Caregiver insight * Surgical context Regional anesthesia is ideal because it reduces systemic drug burden and provides stable analgesia. 3. Drug Sensitivities: Mechanistic Variability * GABAergic agents may produce deeper sedation at lower doses. * Opioid effects vary due to endogenous opioid differences. * Volatile agents are safe but may precipitate agitation on emergence. * Regional blocks improve recovery, behavior, and comfort. PART VI: EMERGENCE — THE SENSORY STORM Emergence reactivates cortical processing abruptly. The autistic brain receives a flood of unfiltered sensory input. Mechanisms * Thalamic disinhibition * Increased amygdala vigilance * Rapid sympathetic shifts * Impaired sensory gating Clinical Strategies * Maintain dim lighting * Reduce PACU noise * Use a single reorientation voice * Offer deep-pressure comforts * Consider dexmedetomidine smoothing * Avoid sudden movements or stimulation Emergence agitation is a physiologic event, not a behavioral defect. PART VII: POSTOPERATIVE CARE — THE RETURN TO SAFETY 1. PACU as a Neurophysiologic Environment A sensory-adapted PACU: * Stabilizes autonomic output * Reduces cortisol * Lowers pain scores * Prevents behavioral decompensation Key features * Private recovery bay * Minimal sound exposure * Caregiver presence * Visual communication tools * Sensory supports (blankets, headphones) 2. Recognizing and Managing Pain or Distress Pain may present as: * Shutdown * Stillness * Repetitive behaviors * Scripting * Withdrawal Combine clinical physiology with caregiver interpretation to ensure adequate analgesia. PART VIII: ADULT ASD PATIENTS — OFTEN INVISIBLE, ALWAYS IMPORTANT Adults with ASD may demonstrate: * Longstanding sensory burnout * Chronic sympathetic dominance * Masked distress * Medication interactions (e.g., stimulants, SSRIs) * GI dysmotility * Anxiety and OCD comorbidity Obstetric, oncology, orthopedic, ICU, and emergency scenarios require tailored sensory and communication strategies. PART IX: COEXISTING MEDICAL CONDITIONS — THE PHYSIOLOGIC MULTIPLIERS * Epilepsy — altered excitability; anesthetic interactions * Hypermobile EDS — positioning considerations * GI dysmotility — aspiration risks * Sleep disorders — sedative sensitivity * ADHD — stimulant interactions * Obesity — airway and dosing considerations Recognizing these ensures comprehensive, safe care. PART X: FUTURE DIRECTIONS — THE INTEGRATION OF TECHNOLOGY AND NEUROBIOLOGY Emerging avenues include: * AI-adaptive sensory modulation in ORs * VR-based preoperative rehearsal * Autonomic biosensors for distress prediction * Genetic and phenotypic predictors of anesthetic sensitivity * Neuromodulation techniques for perioperative stress control These innovations must complement, not replace, neurobiologic understanding. PART XI: QUICK-REFERENCE NEUROBIOLOGY TABLE CONCLUSION — A SCIENCE-DRIVEN COMPASSIONATE PRACTICE Anesthesia for autistic individuals sits at the intersection of neuroscience, physiology, pharmacology, communication science, and human dignity. Understanding the ASD nervous system allows anesthesiologists to prevent distress, stabilize physiology, and enable a safer perioperative journey. When clinicians adjust their techniques to match the patient’s neurobiology, anesthesia becomes not only a technical skill but a profoundly empathetic scientific practice—one that honors both the complexity of the brain and the humanity of the person.

29 de nov de 2025 - 30 min
episode Echo to Anesthesia Map 14 artwork

Echo to Anesthesia Map 14

INTRODUCTION Morbid obesity is not merely an excess of body weight. It represents a chronic cardiometabolic disease state that exerts continuous stress on the cardiovascular system, leading to structural remodeling, functional impairment, and altered physiological reserve. For anesthesiologists, this distinction is critical: patients with extreme obesity and no “comorbidities” may already have advanced yet silent myocardial disease. Echocardiography has emerged as the most comprehensive perioperative cardiovascular assessment tool in bariatric anesthesia. It does not simply identify pathology; it quantifies functional reserve, reveals preload dependence, assesses pulmonary vascular physiology, and predicts vulnerability to anesthetic stress. Unlike electrocardiography or chest radiography, echocardiography delivers dynamic insight into ventricular compliance, atrial pressure burden, right heart mechanics, and volume responsiveness—variables that directly influence anesthetic management. This chapter applies echocardiographic interpretation to a typical bariatric surgery patient and translates imaging findings into practical anesthetic strategy. CASE SUMMARY A 50-year-old male with body mass index (BMI) of 50 kg/m² is scheduled for laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy. He has no documented hypertension, diabetes, coronary disease, or heart failure. However, he reports poor exercise tolerance, loud snoring, and daytime somnolence suggesting undiagnosed obstructive sleep apnea. Given his extreme obesity and reduced functional capacity, preoperative transthoracic echocardiography was obtained in anticipation of cardiopulmonary stress from general anesthesia, pneumoperitoneum, and reverse Trendelenburg positioning. Despite the lack of overt cardiovascular disease, obesity itself imposes chronic hemodynamic stress leading to silent structural and functional cardiac remodeling. ECHOCARDIOGRAPHIC FINDINGS Structural and Functional Summary Two-dimensional measurements: * Left ventricular end-diastolic diameter: 51 mm * Left ventricular end-systolic diameter: 34 mm * Interventricular septum thickness: 16 mm * Posterior wall thickness: 16 mm * Left atrial diameter: 49 mm * Inferior vena cava diameter: 15 mm with respiratory collapse Functional data: * Ejection fraction: 60% * Fractional shortening: 32% * Right ventricular size: normal Doppler parameters: * Mitral E/A ratio ≈ 0.7 * Reduced tissue Doppler e′ velocity * Grade I diastolic dysfunction Valve assessment: * Aortic sclerosis without stenosis * Trivial mitral, tricuspid, and aortic regurgitation Integrated Impression Moderate concentric left ventricular hypertrophy, dilated left atrium, preserved systolic function, impaired relaxation, no pulmonary hypertension, and normal right ventricular size. WHY ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY MATTERS IN MORBID OBESITY Obesity imposes a sustained high-output circulatory state through increased metabolic demand and blood volume expansion. Over time, this results in: * Increased left ventricular wall stress * Elevated systemic vascular resistance * Endothelial dysfunction * Neurohormonal activation * Pulmonary vascular remodeling At the cellular level, obesity leads to lipid infiltration of cardiomyocytes, interstitial fibrosis, impaired calcium cycling, and mitochondrial dysfunction. These mechanisms collectively reduce ventricular compliance and impair myocardial relaxation. This evolution produces an obesity cardiomyopathy phenotype characterized by concentric hypertrophy, left atrial enlargement, and diastolic dysfunction that often progresses to HFpEF. Echocardiography identifies these abnormalities long before clinical symptoms or ECG changes occur and remains the only noninvasive modality that integrates structure, function, and hemodynamics in a single study. INTERPRETATION FOR ANESTHESIA PRACTICE Concentric LV Hypertrophy A wall thickness of 16 mm represents pathological remodeling. This ventricle has a steep pressure–volume relationship with low compliance. It tolerates preload variation poorly and is prone to hypotension following anesthetic-induced vasodilation. Anesthetic relevance: * Induction hypotension may be profound * Rapid fluid boluses risk pulmonary edema * Small decreases in preload cause major output reduction Left Atrial Dilation A left atrial diameter of 49 mm reflects chronically elevated filling pressures. The left atrium acts as a historical marker of diastolic burden and predicts perioperative heart failure and atrial arrhythmias. Clinical importance: * Increased risk of atrial fibrillation * Reduced pulmonary venous reserve * Volume intolerance during anesthesia Diastolic Dysfunction Impaired relaxation limits ventricular filling, especially when heart rate increases. Diastolic dysfunction reduces the compensatory mechanisms that protect cardiac output during stress. Implications: * Tachycardia causes rapid hemodynamic collapse * Positive pressure ventilation worsens filling * Pulmonary edema may develop with modest fluid loading Diastolic dysfunction is the dominant pathology in obese patients with preserved ejection fraction. NORMAL EF DOES NOT MEAN LOW RISK Preserved ejection fraction does not equate to preserved reserve. Patients with HFpEF can sustain normal systolic output only under stable physiological conditions. Anesthesia removes these stabilizing mechanisms, unmasking diastolic intolerance. ECHO-BASED ANESTHETIC PLANNING FRAMEWORK Pre-induction Phase Echocardiography identifies high-risk features: * LV wall thickness >13 mm: hypotension risk * LA dilation: fluid sensitivity * Diastolic dysfunction: heart rate dependence * Dilated IVC: limited reserve under positive pressure ventilation Key principles: * Secure invasive monitoring early if indicated * Avoid deep sedative premedication * Maintain euvolemia and preload * Have vasopressor infusion available before induction Induction Phase Induction should preserve sympathetic tone and avoid abrupt decreases in afterload. Recommended principles: * Titrate induction agents * Avoid propofol boluses * Prefer balanced techniques (e.g., ketamine-based) * Use norepinephrine early if hypotension develops * Maintain sinus rhythm at all times Pneumoperitoneum and Positioning Physiologic changes during laparoscopy include: * Reduced venous return * Increased pulmonary vascular resistance * Reduced stroke volume * Increased right ventricular afterload Management strategy: * Use the lowest effective insufflation pressure * Minimize PEEP * Limit abrupt recruitment maneuvers * Monitor for RV dilation or septal shift with echocardiography when available Emergence Phase This is the most vulnerable period for pulmonary edema and arrhythmias. Dangers: * Negative pressure pulmonary edema * Hypertensive surges * Flash pulmonary edema * Atrial fibrillation Prevention: * Gradual emergence * Avoid excessive fluid before extubation * Treat hypertension early * Maintain positive airway pressure in high-risk patients ECHO IN CRISIS DIAGNOSIS QUANTITATIVE RISK THRESHOLDS * LA ≥48 mm → high risk of pulmonary edema * LV wall thickness ≥16 mm → anesthesia instability * E/e′ >15 → elevated filling pressure * RV dysfunction → poor tolerance of PPV WHEN TO POSTPONE SURGERY Surgery should be delayed for cardiac optimization if any of the following are present: * Ejection fraction <35% * Severe pulmonary hypertension * Severe right ventricular dysfunction * Restrictive filling pattern * LV outflow tract obstruction * Decompensated heart failure symptoms NORMAL VS OBESE HEART ADVANCED APPLICATIONS Use of TEE in Bariatric Anesthesia Indications: * Unexplained hypotension * Right ventricular dysfunction * Pulmonary hypertension * Difficult ventilation with instability Common Misinterpretations * “Normal EF = normal heart” * “Small LV means hypovolemia” * “Large fluids fix hypotension” * “LA size is not important” These assumptions lead directly to anesthetic harm. FINAL IMPRESSION This patient has obesity cardiomyopathy characterized by concentric hypertrophy, left atrial dilation, and diastolic dysfunction with preserved systolic function. The heart is stiff and preload-sensitive. Anesthetic stress threatens decompensation during induction, pneumoperitoneum, and emergence. CLINICAL BOTTOM LINE Echocardiography is not an investigation in morbid obesity — it is the foundation of anesthesia strategy. Ejection fraction reassures falsely. Diastology predicts truthfully. > References > > 1. Lang RM, Badano LP, Mor-Avi V, et al. Recommendations for cardiac chamber quantification by echocardiography in adults. Eur Heart J Cardiovasc Imaging. 2015;16(3):233–270. > > 2. Nagueh SF, Smiseth OA, Appleton CP, et al. Recommendations for evaluation of left ventricular diastolic function. Eur J Echocardiogr. 2016;17(12):1321–1360. > > 3. Poirier P, Giles TD, Bray GA, et al. Obesity and cardiovascular disease. Circulation. 2006;113(6):898–918. > > 4. Alpert MA, Karthikeyan K, Abdullah O, Ghadban R. Obesity and cardiac structure and function. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2014;63(12):1179–1186. > > 5. Peterson LR, Waggoner AD, Schechtman KB, et al. Alterations in LV structure and function in obesity. Circulation. 2004;109(18):2191–2196. > > 6. Wong CY, O’Moore-Sullivan T, Leano R, et al. Alterations of LV myocardial function in obesity. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2004;43(8):139–144. > > 7. Ganau A, Devereux RB, Roman MJ, et al. Patterns of LV hypertrophy and cardiovascular risk. J Am Coll Cardiol. 1992;19(7):1550–1558. > > 8. Schwartzenberg S, Redfield MM, From AM, et al. Diastolic dysfunction in obese patients. Am J Cardiol. 2012;110(11):1655–1660. > > 9. Tsang TS, Barnes ME, Gersh BJ, et al. Left atrial volume and cardiovascular outcomes. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2002;40(6):1018–1025. > > 10. Møller JE, Hillis GS, Oh JK, et al. LA size and mortality. Heart. 2003;89(1):72–77. > > 11. Redfield MM, Jacobsen SJ, Burnett JC, et al. Burden of diastolic dysfunction. JAMA. 2003;289(2):194–202. > > 12. Paulus WJ, Tschöpe C. Pathophysiology of HFpEF. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2013;62(4):263–271. > > 13. Shah SJ. Classification of HFpEF. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2017;70(13):1684–1699. > > 14. Borlaug BA. Obesity, HFpEF, and diastolic dysfunction. Circ Heart Fail. 2014;7(2):219–227. > > 15. Pinsky MR. Cardiopulmonary interactions in anesthesia and ICU. Chest. 2018;154(6):1308–1321. > > 16. Shibata S, Miura S, Zhang R, et al. Obesity and preload dependence. Circulation. 2011;124(4):438–447. > > 17. Magder S. Volume status and venous return. Crit Care. 2016;20(1):271. > > 18. Michard F, Teboul JL. Predicting fluid responsiveness. Intensive Care Med. 2002;28(1):6–13. > > 19. Hirvonen EA, Nuutinen LS, Kauko M. Hemodynamics during laparoscopy. Br J Anaesth. 1995;75(5):570–575. > > 20. Nguyen NT, Wolfe BM. The physiology of pneumoperitoneum. Surg Endosc. 2001;15(8):875–880. > > 21. Lemyze M, Mallat J. Negative pressure pulmonary edema. Intensive Care Med. 2014;40(8):1140–1147. > > 22. Vieillard-Baron A, Millington SJ, Sanfilippo F, et al. Echo in shock management. Intensive Care Med. 2016;42(9):1408–1420. > > 23. Abhayaratna WP, Seward JB, Appleton CP, et al. Left atrial size and prognosis. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2006;47(5):1018–1023. > > 24. Fleisher LA, Fleischmann KE, Auerbach AD, et al. 2014 ACC/AHA guideline on perioperative cardiovascular evaluation. Circulation. 2014;130(24):2215–2245. > > 25. Lavie CJ, Alpert MA, Arena R, et al. Obesity cardiomyopathy. Prog Cardiovasc Dis. 2014;56(4):423–434. > > 26. Shillcutt SK, Markin NW, Montzingo CR, et al. Perioperative TEE guidelines. Anesth Analg. 2018;126(4):1125–1140. > > 27. Oh JK, Park SJ, Nagueh SF. Pitfalls in diastolic assessment. J Am Soc Echocardiogr. 2011;24(3):277–282.

29 de nov de 2025 - 29 min
episode Cryptic Postoperative Shock in a Septic Crush-Injury Patient artwork

Cryptic Postoperative Shock in a Septic Crush-Injury Patient

ABSTRACT A 70-kg male with a 10-day-old crush injury, extensive internal and external degloving, rhabdomyolysis, and sepsis underwent wound debridement under general anesthesia. Despite apparently stable macrocirculatory parameters, he developed severe postoperative oxygen-delivery failure, progressive hypocalcemia after transfusion and albumin therapy, distributive–cytopathic septic shock, and microcirculatory collapse masked by vasopressor support. Serial ABGs revealed rapid transition from compensated physiology to metabolic–mitochondrial failure (lactate 7.7 mmol/L) despite normal SpO₂ and MAP. Thromboelastography normalized following blood products, but tissue perfusion deteriorated. BNP increased to 545 pg/mL with negative troponin and unchanged echocardiography. This case underscores that blood pressure, oxygen saturation, and coagulation normalization cannot be equated with cellular perfusion and metabolic rescue. Lactate kinetics, ionized calcium, and oxygen-delivery physics provide superior physiologic insight for anesthetic decision-making. INTRODUCTION Late-phase crush injury complicated by sepsis creates a uniquely hostile landscape for anesthetic management. These patients exhibit simultaneous: * profound vasoplegia * disordered venous capacitance * coagulation–fibrinolysis imbalance * mitochondrial dysfunction * microvascular shunting * transfusion-related biochemical derangements * calcium–catecholamine uncoupling Anesthesiologists are often misled by stabilization of MAP and SpO₂, especially in patients supported by norepinephrine and vasopressin. However, macrocirculatory stability provides no assurance of microcirculatory adequacy. Tissue hypoxia and mitochondrial paralysis may progress silently, manifesting only as rising lactate and base deficit. This case illustrates the principle of hemodynamic incoherence—a state in which blood pressure and organ flow dissociate from capillary perfusion and oxygen utilization. CASE PRESENTATION Preoperative Status A previously healthy 70-kg male presented 10 days after a major crush injury with internal and external degloving and rhabdomyolysis. He had undergone multiple surgeries elsewhere and arrived with: * septic physiology * increasing bilirubin * hypoalbuminemia * evolving MODS * intubated on CPAP * requiring norepinephrine Ventilation * FiO₂: 35% * PEEP: 5 cmH₂O * PS: 10 cmH₂O Hemodynamic Support * Norepinephrine: 8 mg/50 mL dilution Preoperative ABG INTERPRETATION 1. Normal ABG ≠ Normal Physiology pH normalization reflects buffering, not physiologic health. In sepsis, early maintenance of lactate often precedes abrupt mitochondrial collapse. Ionized calcium was already low, impairing vascular tone and adrenergic signaling. 2. Oxygen Delivery Physics Calculated CaO₂ ≈ 14.6 mL/100 mL — barely sufficient for a hypermetabolic septic state. 3. Ventilatory Masking Pressure support temporarily concealed: * muscular fatigue * increased CO₂ production * rising oxygen debt > References > > 1. West JB. Respiratory physiology: the essentials. 9th ed. Philadelphia: LWW; 2012. > > 2. Walsh BK, Smallwood CD. Use of noninvasive ventilation. Respir Care. 2017;62:932-950. > > 3. Marino PL. The ICU Book. 4th ed. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2014. INTRAOPERATIVE COURSE Debridement lasted <1 hour. Interventions * 1 unit PRBC * Tranexamic acid 1 g IV * Balanced anesthesia * Controlled ventilation Physiological Explanation The “stable OR” is a well-described illusion: * short exposure → no cytokine surge * controlled ventilation → normalized gas exchange * suppressed metabolism * minimal transfusion → deferred biochemical toxicity * vasopressors masked vasoplegia This is not recovery; it is delay of failure. > References > > 1. Mythen MG, Webb AR. Intraoperative blood loss predictors. Br J Anaesth. 1995;74:315–327. > > 2. Vincent JL. Hemodynamic support in sepsis. N Engl J Med. 2010;362:779-789. POSTOPERATIVE HEMODYNAMIC COLLAPSE Hour 0–2 Escalation: * norepinephrine infusion increased * vasopressin 1.2 U/h started * 20% albumin infusion Hemodynamics Interpretation * Rising HR → falling stroke volume * BP crash → vasoplegia plus hypovolemia * PPV 24% → venous capacitance + pooled circulation * Later hypertension = pharmacologic illusion > References > > 1. Michard F. Pulse pressure variation. Intensive Care Med. 2005;31:151-157. > > 2. Monnet X, Teboul JL. Volume responsiveness. Crit Care. 2015;19:354. TRANSFUSION AND COAGULATION Between hours 2–8: * 4 PRBC * 4 FFP * 4 cryoprecipitate Urine output preserved at 40–60 mL/h. Post-transfusion labs: * Hb: 9 g/dL * INR: 2.3 * Platelets: 160,000 TEG * Mild R-time prolongation * MA preserved * Fibrinogen adequate * No fibrinolysis Conclusion: Clot restored. Perfusion not. > References > > 1. Hess JR. An update on storage lesions. Blood. 2010;115:198-204. > > 2. Spahn DR, Bouillon B, Cerny V, et al. Management of bleeding and coagulopathy. Crit Care. 2019;23:98. CARDIAC EVALUATION 3 hours postoperatively: Interpretation BNP elevation reflects: * myocardial inflammation * catecholamine toxicity * diastolic stiffness * septic cardiomyopathy Troponin negativity excludes acute infarction. > References > > 1. Vieillard-Baron A, Septic cardiomyopathy. Ann Intensive Care. 2011;1:6. > > 2. McLean AS. Cardiac dysfunction in sepsis. Crit Care Resusc. 2007;9:384-398. FINAL ABG (12 HOURS) SCIENTIFIC INTERPRETATION 1. Stewart Model Decreased SID from: * lactate * citrate * chloride load * albumin shift * calcium loss → Metabolic acidosis hidden by respiratory alkalosis. 2. Oxygen Delivery Collapse From 14.6 → 8.3 mL/100 mL No pressor can compensate. 3. Microcirculatory Failure * glycocalyx loss * capillary plugging * diffusion distance ↑ * RBC rigidity This is not hypotension — it is cellular ischemia. 4. Mitochondrial Failure Sepsis blocks: * pyruvate dehydrogenase * electron transport chain * NAD⁺ regeneration → aerobic glycolysis → lactate generation → ATP collapse 5. Calcium as Signal Molecule Hypocalcemia causes: * vasopressor resistance * myocardial depression * impaired coagulation * cellular dysfunction References 1. Stewart PA. Modern quantitative acid–base chemistry. Can J Physiol Pharmacol. 1983. 2. Kraut JA, Madias NE. Lactic acidosis. N Engl J Med. 2014;371:2309-2319. 3. Ince C. Microcirculation. Neth J Med. 2009;67:25-36. 4. Broder G, Weil MH. Excess lactate. N Engl J Med. 1964;272:1353-1361. 5. Walsh CT, Calcium signaling. Cell. 2006;127:463-476. FINAL DIAGNOSIS Distributive + Cytopathic septic shock with: * DO₂ failure * transfusion-induced hypocalcemia * mitochondrial paralysis * microcirculatory collapse * albumin-citrate toxicity DISCUSSION > References > > 1. Ince C. Hemodynamic coherence. Crit Care. 2015;19:S1–S4. > > 2. Vincent JL. Understanding lactate. Intensive Care Med. 2016;42:193-196. CONCLUSION > “The monitor shows pressure. The ABG reveals survival.” Anaesthesiologists must diagnose shock not by waveform aesthetics but by molecular and metabolic truth.

27 de nov de 2025 - 31 min
episode Echo to Anesthesia Map 13 artwork

Echo to Anesthesia Map 13

A BASIC-SCIENCE–INTEGRATED, CLINICAL-ANESTHESIA–FOCUSED CHAPTER A 41-year-old male with end-stage renal disease (ESRD), thrice-weekly dialysis, hemoglobin 9 g/dL, post-dialysis potassium 5–6 mmol/L, creatinine 8–9 mg/dL, and urea 110–150 mg/dL undergoes preoperative echocardiographic assessment before renal transplantation. He demonstrates classical uremic cardiac remodeling: severe LV hypertrophy, diastolic dysfunction, pulmonary hypertension, and right heart dilation. The purpose of this chapter is to integrate echo findings → physiology → physics → anatomy → anesthesia strategy, forming a complete, mechanistic, clinically relevant approach. 1. CARDIAC ANATOMY AND PATHOPHYSIOLOGY RELEVANT TO THIS PATIENT LEFT VENTRICULAR ANATOMY: THE THICK-WALLED PRESSURE PUMP The LV has: * Thick muscular myocardium (especially septum and posterior wall) * Helico-spiral fiber orientation, allowing torsion and recoil * A relatively small cavity in severe concentric LVH SEVERE LVH IN ESRD: WHAT THE ECHO SHOWS * IVSd = 20 mm, PWd = 18 mm (Normal: ~9–11 mm) This is pathological concentric hypertrophy with significantly altered chamber compliance. PHYSICS OF A HYPERTROPHIED LV: Laplace’s Law (Wall Stress = (Pressure × Radius) / (2 × Wall Thickness)) * When wall thickness increases, wall stress drops. * The LV adapts to chronic hypertension by thickening its walls to reduce wall stress. But this comes at a cost: * Reduced compliance * Higher diastolic pressures * More oxygen consumption * More dependence on slow filling This fundamentally changes anesthetic goals: > A hypertrophied LV can generate pressure but cannot accept volume. RIGHT VENTRICULAR ANATOMY: THE THIN-WALLED VOLUME PUMP The RV has: * Thin free wall * Crescent-shaped geometry * Greater sensitivity to afterload than preload IN THIS PATIENT: * RV dilated * TR Grade II * RVSP = 57 + RAP mmHg → Moderate–severe pulmonary hypertension PHYSICS AND PHYSIOLOGY: RV afterload is primarily determined by PVR (pulmonary vascular resistance). PVR ∝ (Mean PAP – LAP) / CO Any increase in: * Hypoxia * Hypercarbia * Acidosis * High PEEP → increases PVR → RV failure. ATRIAL ANATOMY AND FILLING PHYSIOLOGY DILATED LA + RA = HIGH CHRONIC FILLING PRESSURES * Reflects diastolic dysfunction and volume overload * LA contraction becomes essential for LV filling IMPORTANCE OF SINUS RHYTHM In Grade II diastolic dysfunction: * Up to 40% of LV stroke volume is dependent on atrial contraction Loss of atrial kick (AF, junctional rhythm) = sudden drop in CO. 2. ECHO FINDINGS TRANSITIONED INTO BASIC-SCIENCE MECHANISMS A. SEVERE CONCENTRIC LVH → PHYSICS + PATHOPHYSIOLOGY STIFFNESS (COMPLIANCE) CURVE The LV pressure-volume relationship becomes: * Steep early diastolic slope * Small increase in volume → large increase in pressure (Physics: ∂P/∂V greatly increased) Clinical anesthesia relevance: Small fluid boluses → FLASH PULMONARY EDEMA. B. GRADE II DIASTOLIC DYSFUNCTION → PHYSIOLOGY E/A ratio “pseudonormalizes” because LA pressure is high. TISSUE DOPPLER (E′ < 0.06 M/S) REVEALS THE TRUTH: * LV relaxation severely impaired * LA pressure elevated * LV fills only because LA pressures are abnormally high Clinical relevance: During induction, if systemic pressure drops: * LA → LV gradient collapses * LV cannot fill * Stroke volume plunges * Hypotension becomes refractory C. PULMONARY HYPERTENSION → RESPIRATORY AND CARDIOVASCULAR PHYSIOLOGY Pulmonary circulation normally has low resistance and thin-walled arteries. In ESRD: * Calcification * Endothelial dysfunction * Chronic volume overload → progressively increases PVR. WHY VENTILATION IS DANGEROUS Positive pressure increases alveolar pressure → increases PVR → increases RV afterload. D. TRICUSPID REGURGITATION → HEMODYNAMIC PHYSICS TR creates a “backward leak” during RV systole: * CVP rises * Forward flow reduced * RV dilation increases wall stress * Renal graft venous outflow becomes impaired post-transplant Fluid interpretation becomes unreliable: > CVP ≠ preload in TR > CVP = combined RV pressure + RA dilation + venous return impedance E. MYOCARDIAL ECHOGENICITY → CELLULAR PATHOLOGY Represents: * Myocyte fibrosis * Interstitial deposition * Uremic toxin–induced remodeling * Microcalcifications These physical changes impair: * Electrical conduction * Mechanical compliance * Contractile efficiency 3. PREOPERATIVE PHASE WITH BASIC SCIENCES ECHO-BASED RISK STRATIFICATION GRID PREOPERATIVE OPTIMIZATION CHECKLIST (SCIENCE INTEGRATED) DIALYSIS (FLUID + SOLUTE PHYSICS) * Avoid intravascular depletion (Starling forces → capillary refill delayed) * Target dry weight POTASSIUM PHYSIOLOGY * K⁺ <5 mmol/L Hyperkalemia alters cardiac membrane potential → conduction disturbances. HEMOGLOBIN PHYSIOLOGY * LVH increases myocardial O₂ demand * Low Hb reduces O₂ delivery → subendocardial ischemia ANATOMY-FOCUSED ASSESSMENT * Orthopnea → LA pressure * Functional status → RV reserve PRE-INDUCTION ECHO RE-LOOK Physics reason: Real-time assessment of filling pressures improves accuracy more than static CVP readings. Evaluate: * LV filling * IVC dynamics (venous return physics) * RV function * Septal bowing (D-sign) * TR jet (estimate PAP) 4. INTRAOPERATIVE MANAGEMENT WITH PHYSICS AND PATHOPHYSIOLOGY HEMODYNAMIC GOALS DERIVED FROM PHYSICS INDUCTION PHYSIOLOGY WHY INDUCTION IS DANGEROUS: 1. Propofol → vasodilation via systemic vascular smooth muscle relaxation → ↓ SVR → ↓ LA→LV driving pressure → LV underfilling → collapse in CO 2. Full induction + positive pressure ventilation → reduced venous return (Physics: ↑ intrathoracic pressure = ↓ preload) 3. Poor LV compliance amplifies any loss of filling. DRUG PROTOCOLS WITH PHYSICS–PHYSIOLOGY EXPLANATIONS ETOMIDATE * Minimal vasodilation * Maintains SVR and coronary perfusion Ideal for stiff LV. PROPOFOL (SMALL DIVIDED DOSES) * Controlled reduction in afterload * Avoids abrupt fall in MAP KETAMINE MICRODOSE * Maintains sympathetic tone * Avoid full 1–2 mg/kg due to tachycardia NOREPINEPHRINE * Increases SVR → maintains LA→LV gradient * Improves coronary perfusion pressure DOBUTAMINE / MILRINONE * Improves RV contractility * Reduces PVR (milrinone) VASOPRESSIN * Maintains systemic pressure without increasing PVR * More RV-friendly than phenylephrine VENTILATION AND RESPIRATORY PHYSICS * Low PEEP ≤5 (High PEEP compresses alveolar vessels → increases PVR) * Avoid hypoxia (Hypoxic vasoconstriction → ↑PVR) * Avoid hypercarbia (CO₂ is a potent pulmonary vasoconstrictor) * Avoid acidosis (H⁺ increases PVR and depresses myocardium) FLUID THERAPY AS A PHYSICS SYSTEM FLUID MANAGEMENT LAW > In diastolic dysfunction, pressure rises exponentially with volume. Thus: * Boluses 100–150 mL * Reassess with echo * Avoid large volume shifts * Maintain stable preload → protect RV REPERFUSION PHYSIOLOGY TABLE 5. POSTOPERATIVE MANAGEMENT WITH BASIC SCIENCE INTEGRATION WHO SHOULD NOT BE EXTUBATED EARLY * RVSP >55 (RV afterload high) * Persistent hypoxia (increasing PVR) * Pulmonary edema (Starling forces reversed) * High vasopressor requirement ICU ECHO REASSESSMENT Repeat echo 6–12 hours for: * RV function * LV filling * TR jet * IVC behavior * Graft perfusion surrogates PULMONARY EDEMA SURVEILLANCE * High FiO₂ requirement * Frothy sputum * CXR: cephalization * CVP rising disproportionately (RV failure) 6. THE ANESTHESIA COMMANDMENTS (PHYSICS–PHYSIOLOGY–ANATOMY) 1. Maintain sinus rhythm (atria essential for LV filling) 2. Keep MAP ≥70 (renal graft perfusion) 3. Avoid tachycardia (reduces diastolic time) 4. Avoid hypotension (collapses LV filling) 5. Avoid volume overload (exponential pressure rise) 6. Avoid hypoxia (↑PVR → RV failure) 7. Avoid hypercarbia (↑PVR) 8. Avoid acidosis (↑PVR + myocardial depression) 9. Protect the RV (thin-walled, afterload-sensitive) 10. Use echo as the primary hemodynamic monitor FINAL SYNTHESIS The combination of severe LVH, Grade II diastolic dysfunction, moderate–severe pulmonary hypertension, dilated right heart chambers, and uremic cardiomyopathy creates a physically and physiologically unstable cardiovascular system. Using anatomy (LV/RV structure), physics (Laplace, pressure-volume relations), pathophysiology (LVH, PH), respiratory mechanics (PVR), and renal transplant physiology, anesthesia must be delivered with: * Precise induction * Controlled ventilation * Echo-guided fluid therapy * RV protection * Gradual hemodynamic transitions * Postoperative vigilance This is a high-risk transplant anesthetic requiring deep understanding of cardiovascular science and its application to real-time clinical physiology.

27 de nov de 2025 - 33 min
episode ABG 5 artwork

ABG 5

> Disclaimer: A quick note — this is AI narration, so you may hear a few mispronounced medical terms. Focus on the science, not the syllables. CASE VIGNETTE A 70-kg adult male presents 10 days after a major crush injury with extensive soft-tissue destruction, internal and external degloving and rhabdomyolysis. He has progressed to sepsis with evolving multiple organ dysfunction, is on norepinephrine, and is planned for further wound debridement. He arrives intubated on CPAP/pressure support. Preoperative ABG (IMG_8842.JPG): * pH 7.36 * PaCO₂ 45 mmHg * PaO₂ 179 mmHg * Na⁺ 140 mmol/L * K⁺ 3.5 mmol/L * Ionized Ca²⁺ 0.90 mmol/L (Ca²⁺(7.4) 0.89) * Glucose 134 mg/dL * Lactate 1.4 mmol/L * Hct 35% (THb 10.9 g/dL) * HCO₃⁻ 25.4 mmol/L, TcO₂ 26.8 mmol/L, BE 0 He undergoes a 1-hour debridement, receives 1 unit PRBC intraoperatively, appears hemodynamically stable and returns to ICU. Over the next 12 hours he receives 4 units PRBC, 4 units FFP, 4 units cryoprecipitate, and 20% albumin at 10 mL/h for 5 hours for falling hemoglobin, ongoing oozing and vasopressor-dependent hypotension. Norepinephrine requirements rise and vasopressin 1.2 U/h is added. Twelve hours post-surgery, a second ABG (IMG_8843.JPG) shows: * pH 7.47 * PaCO₂ 24 mmHg * PaO₂ 240 mmHg * Na⁺ 144 mmol/L * K⁺ 3.9 mmol/L * Ionized Ca²⁺ 0.84 mmol/L (Ca²⁺(7.4) 0.86) * Glucose 88 mg/dL * Lactate 7.7 mmol/L * Hct 20% (THb 6.2 g/dL) * HCO₃⁻ 17.5 mmol/L, TcO₂ 18.2 mmol/L, BE –5.6 * SpO₂ 100% * Dynamic indices: PPV 14–20% * Hemodynamics: BP ~130/75 mmHg, HR 127/min, high-dose norepinephrine + vasopressin At first glance, the preoperative ABG looks “normal” and the postoperative ABG looks “alkalotic yet oxygen-rich”. In reality, they depict progression from tenuous compensatory physiology to cryptic, cellular shock. This chapter uses these two ABGs to walk through: 1. Core basic sciences that shape ABG patterns in septic trauma. 2. Detailed interpretation of the preoperative ABG. 3. Why the intraoperative period looked deceptively stable. 4. How the postoperative period and massive transfusion precipitated collapse. 5. Deep analysis of the postoperative ABG. 6. An integrated macro–micro–mitochondrial shock model. 7. A management strategy grounded in physics and biochemistry. 8. High-yield clinical pearls, formulas and flow-charts. INTRODUCTION Severely injured, septic trauma patients are moving integration tests for every basic science discipline we learn in anesthesia training. In them, oxygen transport physics, mitochondrial biochemistry, microvascular biology, transfusion medicine, acid–base chemistry, and cardiovascular physiology all collide. In late sepsis with trauma and rhabdomyolysis: * Macro-hemodynamics (BP, HR) may appear acceptable. * Ventilator parameters may look “fine”. * Yet microcirculatory and mitochondrial failure can silently progress, only visible on ABG and lactate trends. ABG thus becomes a window into cellular life or death that is often more reliable than MAP, urine output, or even echocardiography. In this chapter, every number on these two ABGs is treated not as an isolated lab value, but as a story about underlying physiology. BASIC-SCIENCE FOUNDATIONS FOR ABG INTERPRETATION IN SEPTIC TRAUMA PHYSICS OF OXYGEN TRANSPORT: DO₂–VO₂ MECHANICS Key points: * >98% of blood oxygen is Hb-bound. Dissolved oxygen contributes very little. * With Hb 10.9 g/dL (pre-op) and SpO₂ ~100%, CaO₂ ≈ 14.6–15 mL O₂/100 mL. * With Hb 6.2 g/dL (post-op), CaO₂ falls to ≈ 8.3 mL O₂/100 mL — a ∼43% drop, despite PaO₂ 240 mmHg. Dissolved oxygen (Henry’s law): Even at PaO₂ 240: 0.003 × 240 ≈ 0.7 mL/100 mL, physiologically trivial. Hence a high PaO₂ cannot compensate for anemia or low CO. Shock is almost always a CaO₂/flow problem, not a PaO₂ problem. VO₂ is given by Fick: If microcirculation or mitochondria fail, tissues cannot extract oxygen, CvO₂ rises, and lactate accumulates despite apparently normal DO₂. BIOCHEMISTRY OF LACTATE AND MITOCHONDRIAL RESPIRATION Under aerobic conditions, glucose → pyruvate → acetyl-CoA → Krebs cycle → electron transport chain (ETC) → ATP. Lactate is generated from pyruvate via lactate dehydrogenase: In sepsis and shock: 1. Nitric oxide (NO) binds cytochrome c oxidase (Complex IV), stalling ETC. 2. TNF-α and inflammatory mediators inhibit pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH). 3. Microcirculatory hypoperfusion creates regional hypoxia. 4. Hepatic dysfunction reduces lactate clearance (Cori cycle). Result: pyruvate cannot enter mitochondria → diverted to lactate → lactate rises even when PaO₂ is high and lungs are “normal”. This is cytopathic hypoxia. MICROVASCULAR PHYSIOLOGY AND SEPTIC SHOCK Microcirculation delivers oxygen and removes waste at the tissue level. In sepsis: * Endothelial glycocalyx is shed → capillary leak, interstitial edema, reduced capillary density. * Leukocyte and platelet adhesion causes capillary plugging. * RBC deformability falls, especially with stored PRBCs → increased microvascular resistance. * Nitric oxide excess produces heterogeneous flow and vasoplegia. This generates hemodynamic incoherence: MAP may be normal, but microvascular flow and oxygen extraction are profoundly abnormal, manifested as rising lactate. ACID–BASE CHEMISTRY: HENDERSON–HASSELBALCH AND STEWART Traditional view (Henderson–Hasselbalch): Our patient’s postoperative pH of 7.47 with PaCO₂ 24 and HCO₃⁻ 17.5 indicates primary respiratory alkalosis masking metabolic acidosis. Stewart strong ion model: Metabolic acidosis develops when SID falls: * Lactate ↑ * Citrate and Cl⁻ from transfusion ↑ * Albumin (a weak acid) ↑ * Ca²⁺ ↓ The postoperative ABG shows low HCO₃⁻ and negative BE because SID has fallen dramatically. TRANSFUSION SCIENCE: BIOCHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL CONSEQUENCES With multiple units of PRBCs, FFP and cryoprecipitate: 1. Citrate load chelates Ca²⁺ → ionized hypocalcemia. 2. 2,3-DPG depletion in stored RBCs shifts the oxyhemoglobin curve left → impaired O₂ unloading. 3. RBC storage lesion → rigid cells, microparticles, free hemoglobin → impaired microcirculation. 4. Electrolyte shifts (especially K⁺) and acid–base changes from citrate metabolism. In a septic patient with compromised liver perfusion, citrate metabolism is slow, so hypocalcemia and metabolic disturbance become profound. CALCIUM PHYSIOLOGY IN SHOCK Ionized Ca²⁺ is critical for: * Cardiac myocyte contraction (troponin–actin–myosin interaction). * Vascular smooth muscle contraction (MLCK activation). * Neurotransmitter release. * Coagulation cascade (factors IX, X, prothrombinase complex). * Mitochondrial enzyme function. Hypocalcemia (pre-op 0.90, post-op 0.84 mmol/L): * Reduces cardiac contractility and CO. * Causes vasopressor-resistant vasodilation. * Impairs coagulation. * Worsens lactic acidosis via impaired perfusion and mitochondrial dysfunction. 20% albumin further lowers ionized Ca²⁺ because of high-affinity binding and, together with alkalosis, shifts Ca²⁺ from ionized to protein-bound form. CARDIOVASCULAR PHYSICS IN SEPSIS Some key relationships: * MAP = CO × SVR. * Wall stress (Laplace) = P × r / (2h); anemia and high CO increase wall stress and myocardial oxygen demand. * SVR = (MAP – CVP) / CO × 80. In vasoplegia, SVR is low, but vasopressors artificially normalize MAP. Pulse pressure variation (PPV) > 13% suggests preload responsiveness. In this patient, PPV 14–20% means he remains fluid responsive, yet lactate stays high — a marker of non-resuscitated microcirculation and mitochondria rather than simple volume depletion. PREOPERATIVE ABG: EXTENDED INTERPRETATION Pre-op ABG (FiO₂ ~0.35, CPAP/PS): * pH 7.36 * PaCO₂ 45 mmHg * PaO₂ 179 mmHg * HCO₃⁻ 25.4 mmol/L, BE 0 * Na⁺ 140, K⁺ 3.5 mmol/L * Ionized Ca²⁺ 0.90 mmol/L * Lactate 1.4 mmol/L * THb 10.9 g/dL At face value this looks “reassuring”. A deeper look shows precarious equilibrium. ACID–BASE: “NORMAL PH OVER FAILING PHYSIOLOGY” Normal pH with normal PaCO₂ and HCO₃⁻ suggests no overt respiratory or metabolic disturbance. Given late sepsis, this means: * Lactate production and clearance are still balanced. * Mitochondrial function is preserved. * Microcirculation still supports aerobic metabolism. But reserve is limited; any additional hit (blood loss, transfusion, worsening sepsis) can rapidly tip the balance. PACO₂ 45 MMHG — EARLY VENTILATORY FATIGUE On CPAP/PS, a septic patient usually hyperventilates, giving PaCO₂ <40. A PaCO₂ of 45 suggests: * Increased work of breathing. * Respiratory muscle fatigue. * High CO₂ production from hypermetabolism. Mechanical ventilation in theatre will temporarily “normalize” PaCO₂ but does not fix the underlying problem. PAO₂ 179 MMHG — “LUXURIOUS” ARTERIAL OXYGENATION BUT LIMITED MEANING PaO₂ is high because of supplemental oxygen and reasonable lung function. However: * Dissolved O₂ at this PaO₂ is only ∼0.5 mL/100 mL. * Hb 10.9 g/dL provides the real oxygen reserve. * Any Hb fall will dramatically reduce DO₂ even if PaO₂ increases further. LACTATE 1.4 MMOL/L — MITOCHONDRIA STILL WINNING Low lactate in a 10-day septic trauma patient is encouraging: * Microcirculation still delivers oxygen. * Mitochondria are not yet poisoned by NO. * Hepatic clearance is adequate. This is the last moment of metabolic stability before postoperative deterioration. ELECTROLYTES AND CALCIUM — THE HIDDEN RISK Na⁺ and K⁺ are acceptable, but ionized Ca²⁺ 0.90 is already low. Consequences at this stage: * Blunted response to vasopressors. * Vulnerability to post-induction hypotension. * Subclinical myocardial depression. Hypocalcemia + sepsis + planned transfusion is a warning that postoperative vasoplegia and shock are highly likely. HEMOGLOBIN 10.9 G/DL — ADEQUATE BUT WITH MINIMAL RESERVE For a healthy elective patient this Hb would be fine; in late sepsis with high metabolic demand: * It is barely adequate. * There is little buffer for blood loss or hemolysis. * Any drop below 8–9 g/dL risks pushing DO₂ below the critical threshold and triggering lactate rise. Summary: The preop ABG represents a tense, fragile equilibrium — “numbers within range” but physiology on the edge. INTRAOPERATIVE PHYSIOLOGY DURING A 1-HOUR DEBRIDEMENT Despite severe underlying disease, the intraoperative course appears deceptively stable: * Duration: ~1 hour. * Transfusion: 1 unit PRBC. * Controlled ventilation. * Ongoing norepinephrine support. * No major hemodynamic crashes. WHY THE OR LOOKS BETTER THAN THE ICU 1. Mechanical ventilation reduces work of breathing, normalizes PaCO₂ and improves PaO₂. 2. Short anesthetic time limits accumulation of cytokines and transfusion-related toxins. 3. Only 1 unit PRBC adds modest citrate, K⁺ and storage-lesion burden. 4. Vasopressors maintain MAP and hide vasoplegia. 5. Anesthetic-induced metabolic suppression transiently lowers VO₂. The underlying trajectory of sepsis, microvascular damage and mitochondrial stress continues, but the OR snapshot is too brief to reveal it. MICROCIRCULATORY AND MITOCHONDRIAL CHANGES ARE SLOW Processes such as: * Glycocalyx shedding, * Capillary plugging, * RBC rigidification, * Progressive NO excess, * PDH inhibition, evolve over hours, not minutes. They therefore manifest mainly in the postoperative period, not during the one-hour operation. Bottom line: The intraoperative “stability” is mostly external support overlying evolving internal failure. POSTOPERATIVE PHYSIOLOGY AFTER MASSIVE TRANSFUSION & SHOCK PROGRESSION The true deterioration occurs in the 12 hours after surgery, driven by: * Ongoing sepsis and inflammatory surge from fresh debridement. * Transfusion of 4 PRBC + 4 FFP + 4 cryo. * 20% albumin infusion (10 mL/h × 5 h). * Escalating vasopressors (NE ↑, vasopressin added). MASSIVE TRANSFUSION AS A METABOLIC BOMB Even though not meeting classic “10 units in 24 h”, this volume behaves like massive transfusion in a septic, liver-hypoperfused patient. Citrate toxicity * PRBC and FFP contain citrate which chelates Ca²⁺: * Impaired hepatic clearance → accumulation. * Ionized Ca²⁺ falls from 0.90 → 0.84 mmol/L. Consequences: * Vasopressor-resistant hypotension. * Reduced CO. * Worsening lactate. * Coagulopathy. 2,3-DPG depletion and storage lesion * Transfused RBCs release O₂ poorly (left-shifted curve). * Rigid RBCs impair microcirculatory flow. * Free hemoglobin and microparticles damage endothelium. Dilutional and strong-ion effects * FFP and cryo alter SID (Cl⁻ load, citrate, etc.). * Coagulation factor balance is disturbed. * Acid–base status drifts toward metabolic acidosis. ALBUMIN INFUSION — DOUBLE-EDGED SWORD Intended: increase oncotic pressure and intravascular volume. Actual effects: * Binds ionized Ca²⁺ → worsens hypocalcemia. * Adds weak acid load → reduces SID. * In leaky capillaries (destroyed glycocalyx), may extravasate and worsen edema. * Does nothing to improve CaO₂. Hence albumin improves BP numbers but may worsen microcirculation, Ca²⁺ and lactate. VASOPRESSOR ESCALATION Rising NE dose and addition of vasopressin indicate catecholamine-resistant vasoplegic shock: * α-receptors are downregulated/desensitized by sepsis. * NO and acidosis blunt vasoconstriction. * Hypocalcemia cripples intracellular signaling. * Vasopressin recruits V1 receptors, partially bypassing adrenergic failure. However, both agents act mainly on macro-hemodynamics; they cannot reverse microcirculatory obstruction or mitochondrial poisoning. MAP is therefore decoupled from cellular perfusion. POSTOPERATIVE ABG (12 HOURS LATER): DEEP ANALYSIS Post-op ABG: * pH 7.47 * PaCO₂ 24 mmHg * PaO₂ 240 mmHg * HCO₃⁻ 17.5 mmol/L, BE –5.6 * Lactate 7.7 mmol/L * Ionized Ca²⁺ 0.84 mmol/L * THb 6.2 g/dL * Na⁺ 144, K⁺ 3.9 mmol/L Despite this, BP 130/75, SpO₂ 100%. MIXED DISORDER: RESPIRATORY ALKALOSIS MASKING METABOLIC ACIDOSIS * Low PaCO₂ and high pH → respiratory alkalosis (hyperventilation from sepsis, pain, catecholamines). * Low HCO₃⁻ and negative BE → concurrent metabolic acidosis (lactate and strong-ion disturbances). * Hyperventilation is a compensatory survival response, not pathology. Relying only on pH would falsely reassure; looking at HCO₃⁻, BE, and lactate reveals severe metabolic derangement. LACTATE 7.7 MMOL/L — SIGNATURE OF GLOBAL CELLULAR HYPOXIA This reflects: * DO₂ < DO₂crit due to Hb 6.2 and microcirculatory failure. * Mitochondrial inhibition (NO, PDH blockade). * Impaired clearance (hepatic hypoperfusion). It is not a lung problem; PaO₂ is more than adequate. HEMOGLOBIN 6.2 G/DL — CATASTROPHIC O₂ CARRYING FAILURE Calculating CaO₂: Compared with ≈15 mL/100 mL pre-op, DO₂ has fallen by >40% if CO unchanged. In septic states with high VO₂, this is catastrophic and sufficient alone to explain lactate 7.7. IONIZED CA²⁺ 0.84 MMOL/L — THE INVISIBLE HEMODYNAMIC TOXIN Effects now are overt: * Vasopressor resistance → higher NE doses required. * Depressed myocardial contractility → low stroke volume masked by tachycardia. * Coagulopathy → more bleeding →

26 de nov de 2025 - 38 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Fantástica aplicación. Yo solo uso los podcast. Por un precio módico los tienes variados y cada vez más.
Me encanta la app, concentra los mejores podcast y bueno ya era ora de pagarles a todos estos creadores de contenido

Elige tu suscripción

Más populares

Premium

20 horas de audiolibros

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo

  • Disfruta los shows de Podimo sin anuncios

  • Cancela cuando quieras

Empieza 7 días de prueba
Después $99 / mes

Prueba gratis

Sólo en Podimo

Audiolibros populares

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba. $99 / mes después de la prueba. Cancela cuando quieras.