Cardiovascular risk is increased in cigarette smokers in the perioperative period and smoking cessation results in its decrease. The pilot study has been designed to assess an association between smoking and arterial blood pressure and heart rate during induction of anaesthesia in gynecologic patients. Significance of smoking cessation before operation in this respect should be also assessed. Systolic, diastolic and mean arterial blood pressures and heart rate were assessed before and after the induction of anaesthesia in gynecologic patients subjected to hysterectomy: 27 smokers and 27 non-smokers. Anxiety level and intraoperative fentanyl use were also analyzed. Examined parameters were compared between smokers who were abstinent for at least one day before operation and those who continued smoking. Arterial blood pressure and heart rate were comparable in both smokers and non-smokers and also in both groups before and after the induction of aneasthesia. Smoking did not result in any modulation of anxiety level and intraoperative fentanyl dosage. Smoking cessation was connected with lower mean arterial pressure before the induction (P = 0,037). Cigarette smoking does not modify values of basic haemodynamic parameters during induction of anaesthesia in gynecologic patients. Smoking abstinence for at least one day before surgery may be connected with a lower mean arterial blood pressure before the induction.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

induction anaesthesia
16
anaesthesia gynecologic
16
arterial blood
16
smoking cessation
12
blood pressure
12
heart rate
12
gynecologic patients
12
smoking
9
basic haemodynamic
8
haemodynamic parameters
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!