Preparation of Patient for Surgery

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Preparation of Patient for Surgery - The First Handshake

  • Initial Contact: Build rapport; address patient concerns.
  • Targeted History:
    • Key comorbidities: cardiac (IHD, HF), respiratory (COPD, asthma), renal, DM.
    • Medications: anticoagulants (stop/bridge?), antiplatelets, steroids (stress dose?), insulin.
    • Allergies & reactions.
    • Social history: smoking (cessation advice), alcohol, illicit drugs.
  • Relevant Examination: General survey, vital signs, systemic exam pertinent to surgery.
  • Informed Consent (Crucial):
    • Details: procedure, expected outcomes, common/serious risks, alternatives, anesthesia.
    • 📌 BRAIN: Benefits, Risks, Alternatives, Incision/Information, Nothing.
  • Risk Stratification: ASA Physical Status (ASA I-VI) for perioperative risk.

⭐ Essential components of valid informed consent include disclosure, capacity, comprehension, and voluntariness.

Preparation of Patient for Surgery - Dodging Dangers

  • Risk Stratification
    • ASA Classification:
      ClassDescription
      ASA IHealthy
      ASA IIMild syst. disease
      ASA IIISevere syst. disease
      ASA IVSevere dis., const. threat
      ASA VMoribund, op last resort
      ASA VIBrain-dead donor
    • Cardiac: RCRI >2 = ↑ risk. Components:
      Component
      HR surg
      IHD
      CHF
      CVA
      IDDM
      Cr >2 mg/dL
    • Pulmonary: Age >60, COPD, smoke, OSA.
    • VTE: Caprini score for prophylaxis.
  • Preoperative Optimisation
    • Diabetes: Target HbA1c <7-8%.
    • Meds: Stop anticoag/antiplatelet (e.g. Warfarin 5d pre-op). Keep β-blockers.
    • NPO: Solids 6-8h, clears 2h. 📌 "2-4-6-8" (Clear-Breast-Formula-Solids).
    • Consent, Site Mark: Essential.

⭐ The ASA physical status classification is a crucial predictor of perioperative risk, independent of the surgical procedure.

Preparation of Patient for Surgery - The Pre-Op Checklist

  • Consent: Verify signed informed consent.
  • NPO Guidelines (📌 "2-4-6-8 rule"):
    ItemDuration Before Surgery
    Clear Liquids2h
    Breast Milk4h
    Infant Formula/Light Meal6h
    Fried/Fatty/Meat8h
  • Investigations: Baseline: CBC, Blood group, Coagulation (PT/INR <1.5, aPTT), RFT, LFTs, Electrolytes. ECG (>40y/comorbid), CXR (if indicated).
  • Medications:
    MedicationAction
    AnticoagulantsHold (Warfarin 3-5d; DOACs 24-72h)
    Antiplatelets (Aspirin/Clopidogrel)High cardiac risk: continue; else stop 5-7d
    Beta-blockersContinue
    Oral HypoglycemicsHold AM dose
    InsulinAdjust (e.g., 1/2 long-acting)
    ACEi/ARBsHold AM (per protocol)
  • Site Marking: If applicable, by operating surgeon.
  • Skin Prep: Antiseptic bath/shower; clip hair (no shave) pre-op.
  • Prophylaxis: Prophylactic antibiotics (<60min pre-incision); VTE prophylaxis (mechanical/pharmacological).
  • Anxiety: Anxiolysis/Premedication if required.

⭐ For elective surgery, patients can typically take clear liquids up to 2 hours before anesthesia induction.

Preparation of Patient for Surgery - Showtime Prep

  • Final Verification: Patient ID, correct site/procedure, informed consent, NPO status confirmed.
  • Surgical Site Marking:
    • Performed by a surgeon involved in the procedure.
    • Patient awake & aware, if possible.
    • Mark at/near incision site, unambiguous (e.g., "YES" or initials), visible after draping. Surgical site marking on abdomen
  • Prophylactic Antibiotics:
    • Administer within 60 minutes before surgical incision; 120 minutes for vancomycin/fluoroquinolones. | Surgery Type | Common Prophylaxis | Notes | |-----------------------------------|--------------------------------------------------|------------------------------------------| | Clean (e.g., hernia repair, breast) | Cefazolin | | | Clean-contaminated (e.g., GI) | Cefazolin + Metronidazole (for anaerobes) | Or Cefoxitin/Ampicillin-Sulbactam | | Cardiac | Cefazolin / Vancomycin | Vancomycin if high MRSA risk/beta-lactam allergy |
  • Skin Preparation: Antiseptic (e.g., povidone-iodine, chlorhexidine gluconate) applied, typically in expanding circles from incision site.
  • Hair Removal: If necessary, use clippers immediately before surgery. Avoid razors (↑SSI risk).
  • DVT Prophylaxis: Mechanical (e.g., SCDs) and/or pharmacological (e.g., LMWH) as per risk stratification.

⭐ Surgical site marking must be done by a practitioner involved in the procedure and while the patient is awake and aware, if possible, before non-emergent procedures.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • ASA classification is key for preoperative risk assessment.
  • Advise smoking cessation at least 4-8 weeks before surgery to minimize pulmonary risks.
  • Optimize glycemic control (HbA1c < 7%) in diabetic patients.
  • Follow strict NPO guidelines (e.g., 2 hrs clear liquids, 6 hrs light meal) to prevent aspiration.
  • Administer prophylactic antibiotics 30-60 minutes prior to surgical incision.
  • Implement DVT prophylaxis based on individual risk assessment (e.g., Caprini score).
  • Correct significant anemia and coagulopathy before elective procedures.

Practice Questions: Preparation of Patient for Surgery

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Flashcards: Preparation of Patient for Surgery

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Stage _____ pressure sores demonstrate full thickness skin loss through fascia with extensive tissue destruction, maybe involving muscle, bone, tendon or joint

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

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