Anesthesia management in neuromuscular diseases (NMDs) is a complex challenge, requiring careful preoperative evaluation, tailored treatment strategies, and vigilant perioperative monitoring. This review examines the nuances of anesthesia in patients with NMD, addressing potential complications such as intubation difficulties, respiratory failure, and adverse effects of anesthetics and neuromuscular conduction blocking agents (NMBAs). Nondepolarizing NMBAs, including steroidal agents and benzylisoquinolines, are analyzed for their role, risks, and optimal use based on procedural requirements and patient characteristics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLaparoscopy, as the most frequently chosen surgical technique in the world, carries specific complications and distinctions in anesthetic management. Complications of laparoscopy, particularly perceptible as disorders of the physiology of the cardiovascular, respiratory, and nervous systems, are caused by the specific technical conditions required for this type of operation. To facilitate surgical access and to clarify the surgical field, it is necessary to create a splenic emphysema, consisting of filling the peritoneal cavity with carbon dioxide (CO₂).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGeneral anesthesia is an integral part of modern surgical practice, but it is associated with a number of complications, including neurological ones. This article provides a thorough analysis of these complications, taking into account the most common ones like drug complications, through delirium, postoperative cognitive impairment (POCD), to the rarest ones like perioperative stroke (POS), spinal cord ischemia (SCI), and postoperative visual loss (POVL). Its main goal is to familiarize healthcare professionals, especially those involved in anesthesiology, with the intricacies of neurological complications.
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