Contemporary Endoscopic Spine Surgery

Anesthesia for Minimally Invasive Surgery of the Cervical Spine

Author(s): João Abrão, Kai-Uwe Lewandrowski and Álvaro Dowling * .

Pp: 31-42 (12)

DOI: 10.2174/9789814998635121010004

* (Excluding Mailing and Handling)

Abstract

Anesthesia for the outpatient ambulatory surgery center has to be tailored to the surgery. The length of surgery, the trauma of painful dissection, and the amount of blood loss have to be considered. Outpatient spine surgery is characterized by shorter simplified versions of their inpatient counterparts carried out in a hospital setting. Many outpatient spine surgeries are minimally invasive through small incisions with less blood loss, tissue disruption, and, more importantly, less painful stimulus during surgery. These modern spine surgery versions also apply local anesthesia strategically to diminish the need for deep anesthesia. In some scenarios, the surgeon may wish to speak to the sedated yet awake patient to lower the risk of injury to neural structures when performing the more dangerous portions of the endoscopic decompression surgery. The need to communicate with the patient is undoubtedly of high relevance in the cervical spine, which requires the anesthesiologist to tailor the management of the patient’s anesthesia to the surgeons’ needs. The monitored anesthesia care (MAC), where sedation is achieved with various sedatives and narcotics, is most appropriate for outpatient endoscopic cervical spinal surgeries. These surgeries may be performed with the patient in supine (anterior cervical surgery) or in a prone position (posterior cervical surgery). Patients in the prone position may pose additional problems maintaining adequate ventilation and sedation while keeping the patient comfortable enough to tolerate the procedure and yet still communicating with the surgeon. In other scenarios or different surgeon preferences communicating with the patient during an outpatient endoscopic cervical surgery may not be required. A Laryngeal Mask Airway (LMA) may be more appropriate with the patient in a prone position. This chapter describes modern MAC concepts, airway management in the supine and prone position, and sedatives as it applies to cervical endoscopic spinal surgery in an ambulatory surgery center.


Keywords: Balanced Anesthesia, Cervical Spine Endoscopy, Monitored Anesthesia Care.

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