Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- Section I Basic sciences
- Section II Anaesthesia and peri-operative care for surgical specialties
- Chapter 7 Cardiothoracic cases
- Chapter 8 Colorectal cases
- Chapter 9 Upper gastrointestinal cases
- Chapter 10 Hepatobiliary and pancreatic cases
- Chapter 11 Endocrine cases
- Chapter 12 Vascular cases
- Chapter 13 Organ transplant cases
- Chapter 14 Otorhinology, head and neck cases
- Chapter 15 Paediatric cases
- Chapter 16 Plastic, reconstructive and cosmetic cases
- Chapter 17 Neurosurgery cases
- Chapter 18 Trauma cases
- Chapter 19 Orthopaedic cases
- Chapter 20 Urology cases
- Chapter 21 Bariatric cases
- Section III At a glance
- List of abbreviations
- Index
- References
Chapter 16 - Plastic, reconstructive and cosmetic cases
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- Section I Basic sciences
- Section II Anaesthesia and peri-operative care for surgical specialties
- Chapter 7 Cardiothoracic cases
- Chapter 8 Colorectal cases
- Chapter 9 Upper gastrointestinal cases
- Chapter 10 Hepatobiliary and pancreatic cases
- Chapter 11 Endocrine cases
- Chapter 12 Vascular cases
- Chapter 13 Organ transplant cases
- Chapter 14 Otorhinology, head and neck cases
- Chapter 15 Paediatric cases
- Chapter 16 Plastic, reconstructive and cosmetic cases
- Chapter 17 Neurosurgery cases
- Chapter 18 Trauma cases
- Chapter 19 Orthopaedic cases
- Chapter 20 Urology cases
- Chapter 21 Bariatric cases
- Section III At a glance
- List of abbreviations
- Index
- References
Summary
General considerations
Plastic surgery may be the last remaining true general surgical specialty. All areas of the body remain within the remit of the plastic surgeon, from hand and limb surgery, body surface surgery, breast and head and neck oncology and reconstruction, to body cavity surgery, harvesting jejunum or intra-abdominal omentum as part of a reconstructive procedure, or using body wall tissue to obliterate intrathoracic cavities. This makes the life of the plastic surgery anaesthetist varied and testing.
Plastic surgery anaesthesia similarly encompasses the full range of anaesthetic challenges, including the extremes of age, significant patient co-morbidities and the obstructed, difficult and shared airway. In addition the anaesthetist may be required to manipulate the cardiovascular parameters to minimise bleeding or ensure adequate blood flow to a flap reconstruction. Both general and regional anaesthesia skills are essential, along with a finesse to ensure smooth emergence from anaesthesia and minimal post-operative pain, nausea and vomiting.
In addition to procedure-specific anaesthetic concerns, plastic surgical procedures present some general challenges.
Multiple-team involvement
Many plastic surgical procedures are performed in conjunction with other surgical teams. Breast, maxillofacial, ear nose and throat or other surgical teams may resect a tumour, for which the plastic surgeon is required to provide a reconstructive solution, while the orthopaedic surgeon may require plastic surgical involvement while reconstructing a severely damaged limb. This requires meticulous pre-operative planning, which must include the anaesthetist. It is essential that the anaesthetist is aware of what procedures are to be performed, what position the patient is required to be in, whether any position changes are required intra-operatively and what sides and sites can or cannot be used for vascular access and invasive monitoring. Particularly with regards to resection of head and neck tumours, a plan of airway management both intra- and post-operatively is required including whether a tracheostomy is planned. Such planning needs to be made well in advance and should be re-confirmed at the surgical (WHO) team brief in theatre.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- A Surgeon's Guide to Anaesthesia and Peri-operative Care , pp. 181 - 196Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2014