Table Of Contents
Surgical briefing
- Before induction of anesthesia
- Confirm:
- 1. Patient ID
- 2. Procedure / site
- 3. Consent
- 4. Clinical info / labs / imaging displayed / results
- 5. ASA
- Review
- 1. Risk of blood loss
- 2. Allergies
- 3. Airway management
- 4. Monitoring / equpiment
- 5. Medications – VTE / antibiotics / other
- 6. Nursing / MD / anesthesia concerns
- 7. Any special precautions
- 8. Expected time
- ** anesthesia
- ** nursing
- Surgeon not required but is suggested
Time Out
- Before skin incision
- 1. Team members introduce themselves
- 2. Final confirmation of:
- 3. Review any final questions
Debriefing
- As soon as the operation is over before patient leaves OR
- 1. Operation that was completed
- 2. Sponge / instrument counts
- 3. Labelling of surgical specimens
- 4. Equipment problems
- 5. Plans for post-operative management
- 6. Review anesthesia / surgery / nursing any intra-operative concerns or could anything be improved
Cardiac conditions associated with the highest risk of endocarditis
- 1. Prosthetic cardiac valve
- 2. Previous infective endocarditis
- 3. Congenital heart disease
- – unrepaired cyanotic
- – completely repaired with prosthetic material < 6 months
- – repaired with residual defect at site of prosthetic material
- 4. Cardiac transplant with valvulopathy
- GU surgeries to not cause endocarditis – prophylaxis not recommend BUT
- 1. If established gyne / GU infection – cover enterococcus (ampicillin, piperacillin)
- 2. If established enterococcal UTI – antibiotics prior to urinary tract manipulation
- Endocarditis prophylaxis for GU procedures:
Classification of surgical site infections
- Occur within 30 days of surgery or within 1 year of implant
- 1. Superficial
- – skin / subcutaneous tissue
- – purulent drainage or symptoms (red, warm, edema + opened)
- 2. Deep
- – fascia/muscle
- – dehiscence, signs/symptoms of infection, access
- – does NOT involve deeper organ space
- 3. Organ space
- – involves anatomy OTHER than the incision
Cutting vs. Coagulation electrocautery
Benefits of PDS / maxon over vicryl for fascial closure
- 1. Tensile strength maintained for longer
- 2. Delayed absorption
- 3. Lack of interstices that can be nidus for infection (monofilament)
- 4. Less inflammatory response
Benefits of LMWH over UFH for VTE prophylaxis prior to surgery
- o Longer half-life
- o Less bleeding risk
- o More bio predictable
- o Equivalent risk reduction
- o Lower risk of HIT
Benefits / limitations of Pfannenstiel incision
- Benefits:
- 1. Cosmetics -> Follow Langer’s lines
- 2. Postoperative pain
- 3. Less fascial wound dehiscence
- 4. Less incisional hernia
- 5. Less adhesions
- 6. Less atelectasis post-op
- Limitations:
- 1. Limited exposure to upper abdomen
- 2. Limited Lateral uterine / adnexal exposure
- 3. Difficult to extend if more room required
- 4. Poor visibility in obese patients
Advantages of direct trocar entry compared to Veress
- 1. Avoid complications of Veress
- 2. 1 blind step as opposed to 3 (Veress, insufflation, trocar)
- 3. Faster
- ** no increased complication rates – is a safe alternative but is the least performed entry modality
Types of bladder injuries
Types of bowel injuries
- 1. Monopolar cautery (injury 4-5cm beyond apparent site)
- 2. Bipolar cautery (visual injury reflects the extent of damage)
- 3. Puncture
- 4. Laceration
- 5. Crush
- 6. Devascularization/ischemic
Types of electrothermal injury
- 1. Direct application
- -unintended activation of the electrosurgical probe
- 2. Insulation failure
- -self-explanatory
- 3. Direct coupling
- -electrosurgical unit is activated in close proximity to another metal instrument -> Current from active electrode flows through the adjacent instrument and damages adjacent structures not within the visual field that are in direct contact with the secondary instrument
- 4. Capacitive coupling
- -electric current is transferred from one conductor (the active electrode) through intact insulation and into adjacent conductive materials without direct contact
Risk factors for fascial dehiscence
- 1. Surgical technique
- – most important factor in preventing dehiscence
- – MC cause – intact sutures pulling through the fascia
- – bites 1cm lateral / 1.5cm apart
- 2. Suture
- – delayed absorbable best (Maxon (polyglyconate), PDS (polydioxanone)
- 3. Type of incision
- (midline > transverse)
- 4. Mechanical stress
- – obesity
- – ascites
- – cough
- – vomiting
- 5. impaired wound healing
- – malnutrition
- – steroids
- – chemo / rads
- – diabetes
- – age
- – malignancy
- 6. Local factors
- – infection
- – hematoma
- – seroma
Fascial incision strength
- – 1 week – 10%
- – 2 weeks – 25%
- – 3 weeks – 30%
- – 4 weeks – 40%
- fascial dehiscences usually happen:
- ** suggests by 2 weeks fascia has gained enough strength to resist daily activities
Evisceration
- 1. inc. serosanguineous discharge from wound
- patient describes tearing / popping
- 2.- open wound
- – probe fascia
- – IV antibotics – broad spectrum
- – cover w/ moist sterile dressing
- – OR – GA
- IN OR
- – determine extent of dehiscence
- – cultures
- – irrigate
- – run bowel
- – close fascia
- How to close fascia
- – retention sutures
- – Smead-Jones mass closure technique (far-near, far, near)
Stages of wound healing
Types of wound healing
Contraindications to Laparoscopy and Hysteroscopy
Virchow’s triad
- Def:
- – hypercoagulable state
- – vascular injury / endothelial injury
- – venous stasis
Levels of VTE risk in surgical patients
- Low risk (2% calf DVT/0.2% PE without prophylaxis):
- -minor sx <40yo, no RFs
- Moderate risk (10-20%/1-2%):
- -minor sx with RFs
- -non-major sx 40-60yo, no RFs
- -major sx <40yo, no RFs
- High risk (20-40%/2-4%):
- -non-major sx >60yo with RF
- -major sx >40 with RFs
- -major sx with RFs
- Highest risk (40-80%/4-10%):
- -major sx >40 with prior VTE/ca/hypercoag/trauma/SCI
- RFs:
- -age
- -obesity
- -immobility
- -trauma
- -malignancy
- -radical pelvic sx
- -medical disease
- -cardiac disease
- -previous VTE
- -severe varicose veins
Risk factors for post-operative wound infection
- 1. Patient
- – obesity
- – immunocompromised
- – steroids use
- – diabetes
- – poor nutrition
- – prolonged hospitalization
- – BV
- – systemic illness
- – low SES
- – smoking
- 2. Surgical
- – wound class – gross infection, devitalized tissue, foreign body
- – entry into GI/GU/Gyne tract esp. w/ spillage of GI contents
- – long OR
- – significant blood loss / poor hemostasis w/ hematoma
- – seroma
- – inadequate antibiotic prophylaxis
- – radical surgery
- – excessive cautery use
- – pre-operative shaving
Warfarin reversal pre-op
Opioid conversion
- Codeine – 7x more than morphine
- Oxycodone – 0.7x more than morphine
- Hydromorphone – 0.2x more than morphine
- To convert:
- oral to IV/SC for narcotics = 0.5
- (i.e. 4mg PO morphine is 2mg IV morphine)