Intraoperative Awareness With Recall: A Descriptive, Survey-Based, Cohort Study

被引:17
作者
Bombardieri, Anna Maria [1 ]
Mathur, Shagun [2 ]
Soares, Andrea [3 ]
Sharma, Anshuman [1 ]
Ben Abdallah, Arbi [1 ]
Wildes, Troy S. [1 ]
Avidan, Michael S. [1 ]
机构
[1] Washington Univ, Dept Anesthesiol, Sch Med, 660 S Euclid Ave,Campus Box 8054, St Louis, MO 63110 USA
[2] Univ Michigan, Dept Anesthesiol, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA
[3] Washington Univ, Dept Med, Sch Med, St Louis, MO 63110 USA
关键词
GENERAL-ANESTHESIA; EXPLICIT RECALL; PREVENTION; SURGERY;
D O I
10.1213/ANE.0000000000004358
中图分类号
R614 [麻醉学];
学科分类号
100217 ;
摘要
BACKGROUND: Unintended intraoperative awareness with recall (AWR) is a potential complication of general anesthesia. Patients typically report recollections of (1) hearing sounds or conversations, (2) being unable to breathe or move, (3), feeling pain, and/or (4) experiencing emotional distress. The purpose of the current study was to identify and further characterize AWR experiences identified through postoperative surveys of a large unselected adult surgical cohort. METHODS: This is a substudy of a prospective registry study, which surveys patients on their health and well-being after surgery. Responses to 4 questions focusing on AWR were analyzed. Patients who reported AWR with pain, paralysis, and/or distress were contacted by telephone to obtain more information about their AWR experience. The interview results for patients who received general anesthesia were sent to 3 anesthesiologists, who adjudicated the reported AWR episodes. RESULTS: Of 48,151 surveys sent, 17,875 patient responses were received. Of these respondents, 622 reported a specific memory from the period between going to sleep and waking up from perceived general anesthesia and 282 of these reported related pain, paralysis, and/or distress. An attempt was made to contact these 282 patients, and 149 participated in a telephone survey. Among the 149 participants, 87 endorsed their prior report of AWR. However, only 22 of these patients had received general anesthesia, while 51 received only sedation and 14 received regional anesthesia. Three anesthesiologists independently adjudicated the survey results of the 22 general anesthesia cases and assigned 6 as definite AWR, 8 as possible AWR, and 8 as not AWR episodes. Of the 65 patients who confirmed their report of AWR after regional or sedation anesthesia, 37 (31 with sedation and 6 with regional anesthesia) had not expected to be conscious during surgery. CONCLUSIONS: The complication of AWR continues to occur during intended general anesthesia. Many reports of AWR episodes occur in patients receiving sedation or regional anesthesia and relate to incorrect expectations regarding anesthetic techniques and conscious experiences, representing a potential target for intervention.
引用
收藏
页码:1291 / 1297
页数:7
相关论文
共 22 条
[1]   Relative amnesic potency of five inhalational anesthetics follows the Meyer-Overton rule [J].
Alkire, MT ;
Gorski, LA .
ANESTHESIOLOGY, 2004, 101 (02) :417-429
[2]  
[Anonymous], 2009, BMC ANESTHESIOL
[3]   Prevention of Intraoperative Awareness with Explicit Recall Making Sense of the Evidence [J].
Avidan, Michael S. ;
Mashour, George A. .
ANESTHESIOLOGY, 2013, 118 (02) :449-456
[4]   Prevention of Intraoperative Awareness in a High-Risk Surgical Population [J].
Avidan, Michael S. ;
Jacobsohn, Eric ;
Glick, David ;
Burnside, Beth A. ;
Zhang, Lini ;
Villafranca, Alex ;
Karl, Leah ;
Kamal, Saima ;
Torres, Brian ;
O'Connor, Michael ;
Evers, Alex S. ;
Gradwohl, Stephen ;
Lin, Nan ;
Palanca, Ben J. ;
Mashour, George A. .
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2011, 365 (07) :591-600
[5]   5th National Audit Project (NAP5) on accidental awareness during general anaesthesia: patient experiences, human factors, sedation, consent, and medicolegal issues [J].
Cook, T. M. ;
Andrade, J. ;
Bogod, D. G. ;
Hitchman, J. M. ;
Jonker, W. R. ;
Lucas, N. ;
Mackay, J. H. ;
Nimmo, A. F. ;
O'Connor, K. ;
O'Sullivan, E. P. ;
Paul, R. G. ;
Palmer, J. H. M. G. ;
Plaat, F. ;
Radcliffe, J. J. ;
Sury, M. R. J. ;
Torevell, H. E. ;
Wang, M. ;
Hainsworth, J. ;
Pandit, J. J. .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIA, 2014, 113 (04) :560-574
[6]   Awareness with recall during general anaesthesia:: a prospective observational evaluation of 4001 patients [J].
Errando, C. L. ;
Sigl, J. C. ;
Robles, M. ;
Calabuig, E. ;
Garcia, J. ;
Arocas, F. ;
Higueras, R. ;
del Rosario, E. ;
Lopez, D. ;
Peiro, C. M. ;
Soriano, J. L. ;
Chaves, S. ;
Gil, F. ;
Garcia-Aguado, R. .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIA, 2008, 101 (02) :178-185
[7]   Awareness During Anesthesia: Risk Factors, Causes and Sequelae: A Review of Reported Cases in the Literature [J].
Ghoneim, Mohamed M. ;
Block, Robert I. ;
Haffarnan, Mary ;
Mathews, Maya J. .
ANESTHESIA AND ANALGESIA, 2009, 108 (02) :527-535
[8]   Methodologic Considerations for Collecting Patient-reported Outcomes from Unselected Surgical Patients [J].
Helsten, Daniel L. ;
Ben Abdallah, Arbi ;
Avidan, Michael S. ;
Wildes, Troy S. ;
Winter, Anke ;
McKinnon, Sherry ;
Bollini, Mara ;
Candelario, Penny ;
Burnside, Beth A. ;
Sharma, Anshuman .
ANESTHESIOLOGY, 2016, 125 (03) :495-504
[9]   Patient perspectives on intraoperative awareness with explicit recall: report from a North American anaesthesia awareness registry [J].
Kent, C. D. ;
Posner, K. L. ;
Mashour, G. A. ;
Mincer, S. L. ;
Bruchas, R. R. ;
Harvey, A. E. ;
Domino, K. B. .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIA, 2015, 115 :114-121
[10]   Dreaming during anesthesia and anesthetic depth in elective surgery patients - A prospective cohort study [J].
Leslie, Kate ;
Skrzypek, Hannah ;
Paech, Michael J. ;
Kurowski, Irina ;
Whybrow, Tracey .
ANESTHESIOLOGY, 2007, 106 (01) :33-42