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경희의료원 마취통증의학과 R3 전주연

Anesthesia for Neurosurgery in Infants and Children Barbara Van de Wiele, M.D. Los Angeles, California. 경희의료원 마취통증의학과 R3 전주연. Introduction. Age related differences and procedure related issues different from adult neuroanesthesia Neuroanatomy Neurophysiology Neuropathophysiology

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경희의료원 마취통증의학과 R3 전주연

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  1. Anesthesia for Neurosurgery in Infants and ChildrenBarbara Van de Wiele, M.D. Los Angeles, California 경희의료원 마취통증의학과 R3 전주연

  2. Introduction • Age related differences and procedure related issues different from adult neuroanesthesia • Neuroanatomy • Neurophysiology • Neuropathophysiology • Review anesthesia considerations for selected neurosurgical procedures

  3. Neuroanatomy • Size : Doubles in the first year • Weight : 80% of adult weight by the age of two, larger percent of TBW(10% vs 2%) • Skull suture : not fused • Fontanelles • Ant. fontanelles - 2~3month • Post. fontanelle – 7~19month. • Open fontanelle • Noninvasive assessment of ICP • US imaging of intracranial structures • Untreated progressive hydrocephalus • Fusion of the skull sutures is not complete until adolescence

  4. Spinal Cord • Anatomical position • Infants – L3 • Adult – L1-2 disk • Tethered cord • Spinal cord migration hindered(progressive neurologic deficits) • Middline dimple over spine above the gluteal fold (asymptomatic tethered cord) -Increased risk of neurologic injury with regional anesthesia or diagnositic lumbar puncture

  5. Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism • Global cerebral blood flow • neonates < adults < children • Brain oxygen and glucose utilization • neonates < adults < children • Autoregulation of CBF in neonate • lower absolute values and over a narrow range • Baseline MAP • closer to the lower limit of autoregulation in infants and young children than in older children

  6. Pressure Volume Relationship • ICP • Infants : 0~6mmHg • Toddlers : 6~11mmHg • Adolescents : 13~15mmHg • Infants and children • Slow inc. in intracranium vol. : compensated by expansion of the cranium. • Rapid inc. are not well tolerated. • Pressure Volume relationship • Proportional to the volume of the neuroaxis : ICP rises more rapidly in children than adults

  7. Symptoms of Intracranial Hypertension • Symptom of Increased ICP • Neonate and infants • Quite nonspecific : increased irritability and poor feeding • Children • Headache on awakening and vomiting • All age group • Lethargy, decreased consciousness, loss of upward gaze and Cushing’s triad

  8. Neuropathology • Brain tumor • Second m/c malignancy of childhood after leukemia • Children supra and infratentorial tumors • Pediatric brain tumor • Involve midline structures

  9. Neuropharmacology • Effects of Inhalation anesthetics and IV anesthetics on CBF and CBV • Similar in children and adults • Sevoflurane • less inc. in CBV than halothane • Isoflurane, sevoflurane, desflurane • Quantitatively similar effect on CBF • Propofol • Dec. CBF velocity in excess of change in MAP consistent • CO2 reactivity plateaus at 30mmHg • Epileptiform EEG changes • Described in children during sevoflurane anesthesia.(>1.5MAC)

  10. Sedation and Induction • Risk and benefic of sedation and induction • Case by case basis • Midazolam premedication • Minimal alteration in vetilation in children • Induction of the child c intracranial HTN • Ideally accomplished using an IV hypnotic agent, nondepolarizing m. relaxant and adjuvant therapy prior to laryngoscopy.

  11. Fluid Management • Preop dehydration is common • Isotonic crystalloid • Choice for intraop. maintenance and hydration • Hypotonic fluid (Ringer’s lactate 273mOsm/L) • Exacerbate brain edema • Glucose containing fluid • Increase the risk of neurologic injury • Hypertonic saline • Beneficial in resuscitation after traumatic head injury in children

  12. Diuretics • Mannitol • Rapid mannitol administration • Hypotension in children • Recommend rate ≤ 0.5gms/kg/20min • Furosemide(0.3~0.4mg/kg) • Adjunct to mannitol • Decrease CSF production and improve cellular water transport

  13. Position and Venous Air Embolism • Risk of venous air embolism(VAE) • Supine position • Infants > Adults • Sitting position • Similar in children and adults • Risk of hypotension with detectable VAE • Greater in children • Bilat. Jugular venous pressure • Increase cerebral venous pressure in children positioned with the head elevated and may assist locating the source of air entrainment

  14. Ventricular Shunts and Related Procedures • Hydrocephalus • Surgical treatment • Ventriculoperitoneal, ventriculatrial, ventriculopleural shunts and endoscopic third ventriculostomy • Acute shunt malfunction in children • Intracranial hypertension and neurologic status deteriorate rapidly. • Complication of procedure • CSF drainage – abrupt decrease in BP • Stimulation of the floor of the third ventriculotomy – high incidence of bradycardia • Arrythmia and tachycardia and rare severe Cx.

  15. Craniotomy for Surgical Treatment of Intracranial Vascular disease • Craniotomy for AVM(arteriovenous malformation) • Infant c large cerebral AVM • CHF in neonatal period • Craniotomy for aneurysm– very rare procedure • Located in the post. circulation

  16. Selective Dorsal Rhizotomy • Reduce spasticity and improve function with spastic cerebral palsy • Anesthetic consideration • Cerebral palsy, testing for selection of n. roots, postop. pain , low birth weight and IVH • GER, poor laryngeal and pharyngeal reflexes, and seizure disorder • Procedure • Laminectomy, division of post. rootlets (M. relaxant cannot be used) • Inhalation anesthesia is superior to N2O-propofol • M. spasm during stimulation of n. rootlets • Elevation of body temperature • Significant postop. Pain • Intrathecal and epidural analgesics

  17. Encephalocele Repair • Herniation of cranial contents • M/C located in the occipital region • Undertaken in the early neonatal period • High incidence of anomalies of other organ system • Anesthetic consideration • Avoiding trauma to the lesion during airway management may be challenging. • Substantial blood loss from vascular structures within occipital encephaloceles.

  18. Myelomeningocele Repair • Protrusion of meninges and dysplastic neural tissue through midline bony defects of the spine • M/C lumbosacral region • Neurologic function is impaired distal to the lesion • Repair • Early neonatal period • Features • Congenital heart defect(ASD) – 1/3 • Short trachea – 1/3 • Arnold Chiari malformation – present in most pt. with myelomeningocele • Anesthetic consideration • Intraop. N. stimulation • Necessary to reverse neuromuscular blockade. • Significant fluid requirements and transfusion • Repair of large lesions

  19. Surgical Treatment of Craniosynostosis • Definition • Premature fusion of one or more cranial sutures sagittal suture (m/c) • Skull growth is restricted and deformity ensues • Assoc. with difficult airway management • Repair • In the first six months (Improves skull geometry and allows for normal brain growth ) • Strip craniectomy, calvarial reconstruction and endoscopic craniectomy • Feature of craniosynostosis • Intracranial hypertension – 23% • Elevated ICP –more common in multiple suture synostosis

  20. Surgical Treatment of Craniosynostosis • Anesthetic consideration • Major blood loss • Multiple suture craniosynostosis repair and calvarial reconstructive procedures • Percentage of estimated blood vol. • Single strip craniectomy – 25% • Metopic craniosynostosis – 42% • Bicoronal synostosis – 65% • Multiple suture – 85% • In excess of 100cc/kg – asso. With coagulopathy • Endoscopic precedure • Blood loss and incidence VAE reduced

  21. Encephalodurosynangiosis • Moya Moya • Progressive occlusive cerebrovascular • Transient or permanent neurologic deficits d/t inadequate cerebral blood flow • Surgical procedure • Transposing the temporal artery to the surface of the brain via a small craniotomy • Stimulate formation of collateral vessels. • Goal of anesthesia • Minimize neurologic morbidity • By avoiding agitation, hyperventilation,increase in cerebral metabolism assoc. with painful stimuli, • By maintaining normacarbia, maintaing systemic blood pr.

  22. Encephalodurosynangiosis • Postop period • Risk for cerebral ischemia and stroke (As collateral circulation develops) • Avoiding dehydration, fever, hyperventilation and agitation d/t pain • Long term prognosis • Excellent in most children after cranial revascularization

  23. Neurosurgical Treatment of Pediatric Epilepsy • Procedure • Temporal lobectomy, Focal cortical resection, callosotomy, hemispherectomy, and placement of vagal n. stimulators • Anesthetic consideration • Antiepileptic drugs • Anticonvulsant and proconvulsant effect • Metabolic acidosis • Topiramate – more common in children • Ketogenic diet • Vagal n. stimulation (new treatment) • Refractory to medical treatment • Severe bradycardia(1/1000), Hoarseness d/t unilat. Vocal cord paralysis (1%)

  24. Traumatic Brain Injury • Focused on mitigating secondary insult • Poor outcome • Hypotension(SBP < 50% 70mmHg + 2ⅹage) • Hypoxemia(PaO2 < 60-65 or SaO2 < 90%) • Cerebral perfusion pr < 40mmHg • Severe elevation in ICP • Guideline • Tx of cerebral perfusion pr. And Hypotension • Option • Tx of ICP > 20mmHg, correction of hypoxia • Recommended therapy • Avoidance of prophylactic hyperventilation

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