TY - JOUR
T1 - Current ventilator and oxygen management during general anesthesia
T2 - A multicenter, cross-sectional observational study
AU - Okayama Research Investigation Organizing Network (ORION) investigators
AU - Suzuki, Satoshi
AU - Mihara, Yuko
AU - Hikasa, Yukiko
AU - Okahara, Shuji
AU - Ishihara, Takuma
AU - Shintani, Ayumi
AU - Morimatsu, Hiroshi
AU - Sato, Akiko
AU - Kusume, Sachio
AU - Hidaka, Hidekuni
AU - Yatsuzuka, Hidehiko
AU - Okawa, Masahiro
AU - Takatori, Makoto
AU - Saeki, Shinsei
AU - Samuta, Takeshi
AU - Tokioka, Hiroaki
AU - Kurasako, Toshiaki
AU - Maeda, Masato
AU - Takeuchi, Mamoru
AU - Hirasaki, Akihito
AU - Kitaura, Michio
AU - Kajiki, Hideki
AU - Kobayashi, Osamu
AU - Katayama, Hiroshi
AU - Nakatsuka, Hideki
AU - Mizobuchi, Satoshi
AU - Sugimoto, Seiji
AU - Yokoyama, Masataka
AU - Kusudo, Kazuhito
AU - Shiraishi, Kensuke
AU - Iwaki, Toshio
AU - Komatsu, Tatsuhiko
AU - Hirai, Yasuo
AU - Sato, Tetsufumi
AU - Kimura, Masakazu
AU - Yasukawa, Takeshi
AU - Kimura, Motonobu
AU - Taniguchi, Masahiro
AU - Shimoda, Yutaka
AU - Kobayashi, Yoji
AU - Tsukioki, Mitsunori
AU - Manabe, Nobuki
AU - Ando, Eiji
AU - Kosaka, Makoto
AU - Tsukiji, Takashi
AU - Tokura, Chika
AU - Asao, Yasuhiro
AU - Sugiyama, Masatoshi
AU - Seto, Kozo
N1 - Funding Information:
Supported by Grants-in-aid for Scientific Research (KAKEN-HI by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science) grant No. JP16K20097 (to Dr. Suzuki).
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2018, the American Society of Anesthesiologists, Inc. Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - Background: Intraoperative oxygen management is poorly understood. It was hypothesized that potentially preventable hyperoxemia and substantial oxygen exposure would be common during general anesthesia. Methods: A multicenter, cross-sectional study was conducted to describe current ventilator management, particularly oxygen management, during general anesthesia in Japan. All adult patients (16 yr old or older) who received general anesthesia over 5 consecutive days in 2015 at 43 participating hospitals were identified. Ventilator settings and vital signs were collected 1h after the induction of general anesthesia. We determined the prevalence of potentially preventable hyperoxemia (oxygen saturation measured by pulse oximetry of more than 98%, despite fractional inspired oxygen tension of more than 0.21) and the risk factors for potentially substantial oxygen exposure (fractional inspired oxygen tension of more than 0.5, despite oxygen saturation measured by pulse oximetry of more than 92%). Results: A total of 1,786 patients were found eligible, and 1,498 completed the study. Fractional inspired oxygen tension was between 0.31 and 0.6 in 1,385 patients (92%), whereas it was less than or equal to 0.3 in very few patients (1%). Most patients (83%) were exposed to potentially preventable hyperoxemia, and 32% had potentially substantial oxygen exposure. In multivariable analysis, old age, emergency surgery, and one-lung ventilation were independently associated with increased potentially substantial oxygen exposure, whereas use of volume control ventilation and high positive end-expiratory pressure levels were associated with decreased potentially substantial oxygen exposure. One-lung ventilation was particularly a strong risk factor for potentially substantial oxygen exposure (adjusted odds ratio, 13.35; 95% CI, 7.24 to 24.60). Conclusions: Potentially preventable hyperoxemia and substantial oxygen exposure are common during general anesthesia, especially during one-lung ventilation. Future research should explore the safety and feasibility of a more conservative approach for intraoperative oxygen therapy.
AB - Background: Intraoperative oxygen management is poorly understood. It was hypothesized that potentially preventable hyperoxemia and substantial oxygen exposure would be common during general anesthesia. Methods: A multicenter, cross-sectional study was conducted to describe current ventilator management, particularly oxygen management, during general anesthesia in Japan. All adult patients (16 yr old or older) who received general anesthesia over 5 consecutive days in 2015 at 43 participating hospitals were identified. Ventilator settings and vital signs were collected 1h after the induction of general anesthesia. We determined the prevalence of potentially preventable hyperoxemia (oxygen saturation measured by pulse oximetry of more than 98%, despite fractional inspired oxygen tension of more than 0.21) and the risk factors for potentially substantial oxygen exposure (fractional inspired oxygen tension of more than 0.5, despite oxygen saturation measured by pulse oximetry of more than 92%). Results: A total of 1,786 patients were found eligible, and 1,498 completed the study. Fractional inspired oxygen tension was between 0.31 and 0.6 in 1,385 patients (92%), whereas it was less than or equal to 0.3 in very few patients (1%). Most patients (83%) were exposed to potentially preventable hyperoxemia, and 32% had potentially substantial oxygen exposure. In multivariable analysis, old age, emergency surgery, and one-lung ventilation were independently associated with increased potentially substantial oxygen exposure, whereas use of volume control ventilation and high positive end-expiratory pressure levels were associated with decreased potentially substantial oxygen exposure. One-lung ventilation was particularly a strong risk factor for potentially substantial oxygen exposure (adjusted odds ratio, 13.35; 95% CI, 7.24 to 24.60). Conclusions: Potentially preventable hyperoxemia and substantial oxygen exposure are common during general anesthesia, especially during one-lung ventilation. Future research should explore the safety and feasibility of a more conservative approach for intraoperative oxygen therapy.
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U2 - 10.1097/ALN.0000000000002181
DO - 10.1097/ALN.0000000000002181
M3 - Article
C2 - 29553985
AN - SCOPUS:85059258247
SN - 0003-3022
VL - 129
SP - 67
EP - 76
JO - Anesthesiology
JF - Anesthesiology
IS - 1
ER -