Emergence Fundamentals - Waking Up Right
- Core: Planned, smooth transition from general anesthesia to wakefulness, ensuring physiological stability and patient comfort.
- Mechanism:
- Progressive ↓ of anesthetic concentration at CNS effect sites.
- Elimination: Lungs (inhaled agents), hepatic metabolism/renal excretion/redistribution (IV agents).
- Reversal of residual neuromuscular blockade.
- Return of protective airway reflexes (cough, gag) and adequate spontaneous ventilation.
- Influencers: Anesthetic properties, patient factors (age, comorbidities, genetics), surgical duration, core body temperature.
⭐ Residual neuromuscular blockade is a significant risk during emergence; objective monitoring (e.g., TOF ratio > 0.9) is crucial before extubation.
Managing Emergence - The Smooth Exit
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Goal: Smooth return to consciousness; stable vitals, patent airway.
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Process: Stop anesthetics; 100% O2; gentle oropharyngeal suction.
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Reversal Agents:
- Neuromuscular Blockade (NMB):
- Neostigmine 0.04-0.05 mg/kg + Glycopyrrolate 0.01 mg/kg.
- Sugammadex (for Rocuronium/Vecuronium): 2 mg/kg (TOF count 2), 4 mg/kg (deep block), 16 mg/kg (rescue after Rocuronium 1.2 mg/kg).
- Opioids: Naloxone 40-80 mcg IV titrated for respiratory depression (repeat prn).
- Benzodiazepines: Flumazenil 0.2 mg IV, then 0.1 mg/min (max 1 mg).
- Neuromuscular Blockade (NMB):
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Extubation Criteria: Awake, follows commands, TOF ratio >0.9, Vital Capacity >10-15 ml/kg, effective cough/gag.
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Common Complications & Management:
- Coughing/Bucking: Lidocaine IV 1-1.5 mg/kg (2-3 min prior).
- Laryngospasm: 100% O2, positive pressure ventilation (PPV), jaw thrust; Suxamethonium 0.1-0.5 mg/kg IV if severe.
- Hypertension/Tachycardia: Address pain, bladder distension, hypoxia.
- Emergence Delirium: Rule out hypoxia/hypercarbia; consider dexmedetomidine.
⭐ Post-operative shivering significantly increases O2 consumption (↑ by 200-500%). Treat with active warming and Pethidine 12.5-25 mg IV.
Extubation Criteria - The Great Escape
Safe extubation, the 'Great Escape' from mechanical ventilation, requires meeting specific criteria:
- Consciousness: Awake, follows commands.
- Airway Reflexes: Intact cough/gag.
- Respiratory Mechanics:
- Spontaneous breathing.
- VT > 5 ml/kg.
- RR: 10-30/min.
- VC > 10 ml/kg.
- NIF/MIP < -20 cm H₂O.
- Oxygenation:
- PaO₂ > 60 mmHg (FiO₂ ≤ 0.4).
- SpO₂ > 92% (FiO₂ ≤ 0.4).
- Neuromuscular Recovery (📌 TOF > 0.9):
- TOF ratio > 0.9.
- Sustained head lift (5s), hand grip.
- Hemodynamic Stability: Stable vitals, no active bleeding.
- General: Normothermia, adequate analgesia.
⭐ TOF ratio > 0.9 is critical to prevent residual paralysis and associated complications.
Emergence Complications - Navigating Storms
Prompt management of emergence issues is critical.
- Laryngospasm:
- Cause: Airway irritation, light anesthesia.
- Signs: Stridor, ↓SpO2, paradoxical chest movement.
- Rx: 100% O2, CPAP, deepen anesthesia (propofol 0.25-0.5 mg/kg), suxamethonium 0.1-1 mg/kg IV. 📌 Larson's maneuver.
- Bronchospasm:
- Cause: Airway reactivity, aspiration.
- Signs: Wheeze, ↑peak airway pressure, ↓SpO2.
- Rx: 100% O2, β2-agonists, IV steroids (hydrocortisone 100-200mg), deepen anesthesia.
- Emergence Delirium (ED):
- Cause: Pain, hypoxia, bladder distension.
- Rx: Rule out hypoxia. Treat pain. Small dose propofol/dexmedetomidine.
- Shivering:
- Effects: ↑O2 consumption (200-500%).
- Rx: Warming. Pethidine 12.5-25 mg IV.
- PONV:
- Risk: 📌 Apfel score.
- Rx: Prophylaxis (ondansetron 4mg, dexamethasone 4-8mg). Rescue antiemetics.
⭐ Ondansetron is a 5-HT3 antagonist for PONV; dose 4mg IV.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Recovery sequence: Consciousness → protective reflexes (gag/cough) → motor function.
- Delayed emergence: Caused by residual drugs, hypothermia, metabolic disturbances, or CNS events.
- Extubation readiness: Key criteria include TV >5 ml/kg, NIF <-20 cmH2O, adequate oxygenation.
- Emergence delirium: Common in children (sevoflurane); assess for pain, hypoxia.
- Postoperative shivering: Markedly ↑O2 demand; treat with warming, meperidine/pethidine.
- Laryngospasm: Critical risk; manage with 100% O2, PPV, jaw thrust, suxamethonium if needed.
- PONV: Prophylaxis vital for at-risk groups (female, non-smoker, history).
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