6533b85efe1ef96bd12bfb96

RESEARCH PRODUCT

General Aspects of Thoracic Anesthesia

Carmen UnzuetaMohamed R. El TahanWaheed KarzaiMert ŞEntürkJohan D. BenceManuell GranellLaszlo L. SzegediMarc LickerBenjmin G. ShelleyTamás VéghFederico PiccioniNandor MarczinNandor MarczinNandor Marczin

subject

Perioperative medicinebusiness.industryPrehabilitationmedicine.medical_treatmentDelphi methodChronic painPostoperative recoverySubspecialtymedicine.diseasePreoperative careAnesthesiamedicineAirway managementbusiness

description

Thoracic anesthesia, a fascinating subspecialty, provides perioperative medicine for a spectrum of dynamically evolving surgical procedures ranging from classical thoracotomies to minimally invasive and ultra-minimally invasive video or robotically assisted procedures. Its core mission is to provide optimal surgical conditions by deflating the operative lung while providing adequate oxygenation and avoiding injury to the ventilated lung. Thoracic anesthesia also provides preoperative care to achieve best possible health status before surgery and improves postoperative recovery by providing means of pain therapy and enhanced recovery following some of the most painful procedures in patients who are at the highest risk for developing chronic pain. This chapter focuses on major current paradigms of general thoracic anesthesia representing the clinical views and preferences of a substantial core leadership of the EACTA thoracic subcommittee. As such, it is a uniquely European perspective not on the exact procedure specific details but, as the title demands, on the fundamentally basic principles of thoracic anesthesia. While covering the traditional topics of airway management, ventilation and acute pain in sufficient detail, it also expands into newer areas of interest as preoperative optimization through prehabilitation and introducing new methods to prevent chronic pain. While the discussed strategies currently represent our view as a group, we hope to formally test these concepts in the near future by subjecting these recommendations to a formal consensus statement (Thoracic Anaesthesia Consensus Agreement, TOSSCA) through a robust Delphi process involving the full membership of the EACTA Thoracic committee and the wider EACTA membership.

https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-40679-0_2