Highlights-Thoracic anesthesiologists might be involved in the perioperative care of patients suspected to have or diagnosed COVID-19 who might undergo thoracic surgery during the acute or convalescence phases of the disease.-Caution should be exercised when securing the airway and performing lung separation (if required), through vigilant donning/doffing of personal protection equipment (PPE), planning ahead, team briefing, proper preparations, systematic approach, and debriefing.-Lung separation / isolation should be individualized using either bronchial blockers or double lumen tubes according to the patient"s status and postoperative care plan.-Optimum PPE donning should be maintained during surgery and anesthesia. One lung ventilation could be challenging in this group of patients.-The anesthesiologists should discuss the feasibility of extubating the patient following thoracic surgery, and procedures for postoperative care andtransferring the patient to the isolation wards or intensive care unit.Abstract 110 words, Manuscript 4935 words Running
OLV increases the alveolar concentrations of proinflammatory mediators in the ventilated lung. Both desflurane and sevoflurane suppress the local alveolar, but not the systemic, inflammatory responses to OLV and thoracic surgery.
A rapid recovery of neuromuscular function was found in myasthenic patients receiving rocuronium when sugammadex was used for reversal. This combination could be a rational alternative for myasthenic patients for whom neuromuscular blockade is mandatory during surgery.
Since patients affected by Buerger's disease consist a group of young population who are still in their productive stages, every effort should be taken to obtain a limb salvage in the ischemic period. Although the patency rates do not seem promising, the limb salvation rate was quite satisfactory.
Anaesthetic management of thymectomy in myasthenia gravis requires experience concerning different approaches. Sugammadex should be considered as a possible further step toward postoperative safety.
Postoperative wound infections are the third most common type of nosocomial infection in German emergency hospitals after pneumonia and urinary infections. They are associated with increased morbidity and mortality, prolonged hospital stay and increased costs. The most important risk factors include the microbiological state of the skin surrounding the incision, delayed or premature prophylaxis with antibiotics, duration of surgery, emergency surgery, poorly controlled diabetes mellitus, malignant disease, smoking and advanced age. Anesthesiological measures to decrease the incidence of wound infections are maintaining normothermia, strict indications for allogenic blood transfusions and timely prophylaxis with antibiotics. Blood glucose concentrations should be kept in the range of 8.3-10 mmol/l (150-180 mg/dl) as lower values are associated with increased complications. Intraoperative and postoperative hyperoxia with 80% O(2) has not been shown to effectively decrease wound infections. The application of local anesthetics into the surgical wound in clinically relevant doses for postoperative analgesia does not impair wound healing.
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