Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

Emergence and Recovery from Anesthesia

Emergence and Recovery from Anesthesia

Emergence and Recovery from Anesthesia

On this page

Emergence and Recovery from Anesthesia - Wake Up Call!

  • Emergence: Transition from GA to consciousness. Goal: Smooth, safe return to physiological baseline.
  • Phases of Recovery:
      • Early (PACU Phase I): Regain protective reflexes, vital sign stability.
      • Intermediate (PACU Phase II): Home-readiness criteria, ambulation.
      • Late: Full physiological & psychological recovery.
  • Key Emergence Events:
      • Consciousness returns.
      • Airway reflexes (cough, gag) present.
      • Adequate spontaneous ventilation (TV > 5 ml/kg, RR 10-30/min).
      • Hemodynamic stability.
  • Assessment: Modified Aldrete Score (MAS) commonly used.

⭐ A Modified Aldrete Score (MAS) of ≥9 (out of 10) is typically required for discharge from PACU Phase I. Components: Activity, Respiration, Circulation, Consciousness, O₂ Saturation (each 0-2 points).

Emergence and Recovery from Anesthesia - Vital Signs Vigil

  • PACU Monitoring Essentials:
    • ECG, SpO2 (>92%), NIBP, RR, Temperature.
    • Pain Score (VAS/NRS), Sedation Score (Ramsay/RASS).
  • Aldrete Score: Assesses PACU discharge readiness.
    • 📌 Mnemonic: MARCO-S (Muscle activity, Respiration, Circulation, Consciousness, O2 Saturation).
    • Components (each 0-2 points):
      • Activity: Moves 4 limbs / 2 limbs / 0 limbs.
      • Respiration: Breathes deep & coughs / Dyspneic/shallow / Apneic.
      • Circulation: BP ±20% pre-anesthetic / BP ±20-49% / BP ±50%.
      • Consciousness: Fully awake / Arousable on calling / Not responding.
      • O2 Saturation: SpO2 >92% (RA) / Needs O2 for SpO2 >90% / SpO2 <90% (with O2).
    • Max score: 10. Discharge: Score ≥9.

⭐ Postoperative shivering can increase oxygen consumption by up to 5 times.

Emergence and Recovery from Anesthesia - Recovery Roadblocks

  • Respiratory:
    • Obstruction: Tongue, laryngospasm (stridor; Rx: O2, PPV, suxamethonium 0.1-0.5 mg/kg IV), edema.
    • Bronchospasm: Wheeze. Rx: β2-agonists.
    • Hypoxemia: $SpO_2 < \textbf{90}%$. Causes: hypoventilation, V/Q mismatch.
  • Cardiovascular:
    • Hypertension: Pain, anxiety, hypoxia.
    • Hypotension: Hypovolemia, myocardial depression.
    • Arrhythmias: Brady/tachycardia.
  • Neurological:
    • Emergence Delirium: Agitation. R/O hypoxia, pain.
    • Delayed Awakening: Drug effect, metabolic, neuro.
  • PONV:
    • Risks (Apfel). Prophylaxis: Ondansetron 4 mg IV.
  • Pain:
    • Multimodal analgesia. Assess (VAS).
  • Shivering/Hypothermia:
    • Temp $<\textbf{36}^\circ C$. ↑O2 consumption. Rx: Warming, Pethidine 12.5-25 mg IV.

⭐ Laryngospasm: Critical airway emergency. Rx: 100% O2, PPV, then suxamethonium 0.1-0.5 mg/kg IV if unresolved.

Emergence and Recovery from Anesthesia - Smooth Sailing Strategies

Smooth emergence minimizes complications. Key management strategies:

  • Airway/Respiration: Patent airway, O₂, adequate NMB reversal, manage laryngo/bronchospasm.
  • Pain Control (Multimodal): Opioids (Fentanyl 1-2 mcg/kg IV), NSAIDs, regional blocks.
  • PONV Prophylaxis & Tx: Risk assess (Apfel). Ondansetron 4-8 mg IV, Dexamethasone 4-8 mg IV.
  • Shivering Management: Forced air warmers, warm IV fluids. Pethidine 12.5-25 mg IV.
  • Hemodynamic Stability: Monitor & manage BP/HR fluctuations.
  • Emergence Delirium: Rule out hypoxia, hypercarbia, pain. Quiet environment. Dexmedetomidine if severe.

PACU Discharge Criteria:

⭐ The Modified Aldrete Score (assessing Activity, Respiration, Circulation, Consciousness, O₂ Saturation - each 0-2 points) is crucial. A score ≥9 generally indicates readiness for PACU discharge.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Emergence signifies transition from GA to consciousness; Recovery occurs in PACU.
  • Aldrete score (≥9) assesses PACU discharge: activity, respiration, circulation, consciousness, O2 saturation.
  • Key complications: airway obstruction, hypoxemia, hypoventilation, PONV, shivering, emergence delirium.
  • Delayed emergence often due to residual anesthetics, metabolic issues, or hypothermia.
  • Shivering significantly ↑O2 consumption; treat with warming, pethidine.
  • PONV is common; risk assessment and multimodal prophylaxis are vital.

Continue reading on Oncourse

Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.

CONTINUE READING — FREE

or get the app

Rezzy — Oncourse's AI Study Mate

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, your AI Study Mate, to explain anything you didn't understand

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

START FOR FREE