Perioperative Medicine for the Junior Clinician
eBook - ePub

Perioperative Medicine for the Junior Clinician

Joel Symons, Paul Myles, Rishi Mehra, Christine Ball

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eBook - ePub

Perioperative Medicine for the Junior Clinician

Joel Symons, Paul Myles, Rishi Mehra, Christine Ball

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Über dieses Buch

Perioperative Medicine for the Junior Clinician is the first easy-to-read resource, featuring a digital component, on how to manage a diverse range of patients in the perioperative period, providing up-to-date practical knowledge and advice from a broad range of medical specialists caring for surgical patients.

Perioperative Medicine for the Junior Clinician provides a guide to perioperative care, covering principles and practices of care; risk assessment; laboratory investigations; medication management; specific medical conditions and complications; postoperative care and pain management. It also features bite-size videos explaining the key concepts, as well as case studies, investigations and quizzes.

Ideal for final year medical students and junior clinicians, this digital and print resource will be an invaluable tool when working in this multidisciplinary, team-based specialty.

Perioperative Medicine for the Junior Clinician:

  • Is based on a sell-out course run at the Alfred Hospital and Monash University in Melbourne, Australia
  • Is a practical resource available in a flexible and portable content
  • Features bite-size videos which further explain concepts in the written text, and clinically relevant case studies, all found on the companion website
  • Is structured around guidelines and protocols

The video materials, case studies, self-assessment quizzes and fully explained answers can be viewed on the companion website at www.wiley.com/go/perioperativemed

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Information

Jahr
2015
ISBN
9781118779118

Part I
Introduction

1
The role of the perioperative medicine physician

Mike Grocott
University of Southampton, United Kingdom
The care of patients undergoing major surgery has evolved incrementally since anaesthesia revolutionised surgical care in the years following 1846. Whilst pharmacological and monitoring technologies have advanced, anaesthetists have remained predominantly focused on the operating room environment and have in general resisted moves outside this ‘comfort zone’. Surgeons have been the principal care deliverers around the time of surgery. In the last two decades, this has begun to change, with a shift towards an expanded role in perioperative care for the anaesthetist. In parallel, physicians have become more interested in improving the perioperative care of some groups of patients. For example, the engagement of geriatricians in the care of patients undergoing hip fracture surgery has led to the concept of the ‘ortho-geriatrician'. Meanwhile, manpower issues in surgical specialties have created pressure for many surgeons to concentrate on operating time, over and above other elements of the care of surgical patients. As a consequence, new labels have developed including perioperative medicine (1994), the perioperative physician (1996) and most recently the perioperative surgical home (2011).
So what has driven the increased focus on perioperative care? Primarily, there has been recognition of unmet need. With growth in the volume and scope of major surgery has come an epidemic of postoperative harm. This is an inevitable consequence of more adventurous, technically challenging surgery in an ageing population with multiple co-morbidities [1]. The global volume of major surgery is approaching 250 million cases per year. Short-term (hospital/30-day) mortality following major surgery, even in the developed world, may approach 4% and morbidity is more frequent by an order of magnitude [2,3]. Furthermore, the substantial impact of short-term postoperative morbidity on subsequent long-term survival is increasingly recognised as an important healthcare challenge [3]. Taken with the growing literature describing interventions that affect postoperative outcome [4], this suggests a significant burden of avoidable harm.

The scope of perioperative medicine

This spans the period from the moment that surgery is first contemplated through to complete recovery. The role of the perioperative physician includes preoperative risk evaluation, collaborative (shared) decision making [5], optimisation of all aspects of physiological function prior to surgery, individualised ‘goal-directed' best intraoperative care, delivering the appropriate level of postoperative care and rehabilitation to normal function [4]. The preoperative period offers a unique opportunity to invest in improving physiological function in a short defined period of time, for example through physical prehabilitation, in patients who are likely to be highly motivated in the face of an imminent threat. Furthermore, the patient–perioperative physician interaction may be one of very few contacts that an individual patient has with medical professionals and offers an opportunity for general health messaging as well as implementation of primary and secondary prevention strategies.
In the post ‘evidence-based medicine' era, the focus of medical practice will increasingly move towards personalised/stratified/precision medicine [6]. The technology available to quantify and classify perioperative risk is becoming increasingly sophisticated. In the future, this process is likely to involve a combination of clinical risk scores, objective evaluation of physiological reserve (e.g. cardiopulmonary exercise testing) and the use of specific plasma biomarkers, interpreted in the context of the patient's genotype (+/− epigenetic processes). Perioperative decision making will involve expertise in interpreting such data coupled with understanding of the planned operative procedure and a high degree of competence in collaborative decision making [5]. Improving the quality of decision making through the use of decision aids has been shown to reduce patient choices for discretionary surgery [7] and is likely to have a similar effect across all types of surgery. In the context of an extraordinarily high incidence of surgery during the final months of life [8], such an approach is likely to be beneficial for the quality of life of patients and their carers, as well as for an overburdened healthcare system.
The scope of decision making will include consideration of the extent of surgery, use of adjunctive therapies, and modification of pre-, intra- and postoperative care. Patients with limited physiological reserve may be prescribed general (prehabilitation) or specific (e.g. inspiratory muscle training) preoperative interventions. Intraoperative care may be focused on monitoring and interventions to address particular risks such as cardiac, pulmonary or cognitive dysfunction. The location and intensity of postoperative care will be based on the risk of harm asses...

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