Prevention of accidental awareness under general anaesthesia: a regional service evaluation
Prevention of accidental awareness under general anaesthesia: a regional service evaluation
The United Kingdom’s Fifth National Audit Project investigated the incidence and causes of accidental awareness during general anaesthesia. Subsequently, guidelines produced by the Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland provide key recommendations to minimise awareness. These include using processed electroencephalogram for patients receiving total intravenous anaesthesia while paralysed and using audible low end-tidal anaesthetic concentration alarms. The Southcoast Perioperative Audit and Research Collaboration undertook a five-day regional service evaluation, assessing the measures in place to minimise awareness and conducting a practitioner survey. Eight hospitals participated with 382 theatre attendances were analysed. Processed electroencephalograph monitoring for patients receiving total intravenous anaesthesia with neuromuscular blockade has been widely adopted into regional practice, from 23% of cases in the Fifth National Audit Project, to 85% in this snapshot. During volatile anaesthesia, age-adjusted low end-tidal anaesthetic concentration alarms were used in 34% cases. The range was 0–97% at different hospitals, suggesting heterogeneity in practice. Seventy-six per cent of anaesthetists rarely alter the default anaesthetic machine alarm settings. Therefore, instigating default low end-tidal anaesthetic concentration alarms could improve compliance with guidelines and reduce the risk of awareness for patients.
Alarm, Awareness, BIS, Prevention, Volatile, pEEG
Preston, Katie L.
7858a8f8-a96e-4f75-ba93-54dc95f4d892
Jackson, Alexander I.R.
9bbcdd0e-a9c8-46d3-945c-53e9262c4f4c
Preston, Katie L.
7858a8f8-a96e-4f75-ba93-54dc95f4d892
Jackson, Alexander I.R.
9bbcdd0e-a9c8-46d3-945c-53e9262c4f4c
Preston, Katie L. and Jackson, Alexander I.R.
,
the SPARC investigators
(2024)
Prevention of accidental awareness under general anaesthesia: a regional service evaluation.
Journal of Perioperative Practice.
(doi:10.1177/17504589241228201).
Abstract
The United Kingdom’s Fifth National Audit Project investigated the incidence and causes of accidental awareness during general anaesthesia. Subsequently, guidelines produced by the Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland provide key recommendations to minimise awareness. These include using processed electroencephalogram for patients receiving total intravenous anaesthesia while paralysed and using audible low end-tidal anaesthetic concentration alarms. The Southcoast Perioperative Audit and Research Collaboration undertook a five-day regional service evaluation, assessing the measures in place to minimise awareness and conducting a practitioner survey. Eight hospitals participated with 382 theatre attendances were analysed. Processed electroencephalograph monitoring for patients receiving total intravenous anaesthesia with neuromuscular blockade has been widely adopted into regional practice, from 23% of cases in the Fifth National Audit Project, to 85% in this snapshot. During volatile anaesthesia, age-adjusted low end-tidal anaesthetic concentration alarms were used in 34% cases. The range was 0–97% at different hospitals, suggesting heterogeneity in practice. Seventy-six per cent of anaesthetists rarely alter the default anaesthetic machine alarm settings. Therefore, instigating default low end-tidal anaesthetic concentration alarms could improve compliance with guidelines and reduce the risk of awareness for patients.
Text
jackson_awareness_accepted
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 15 December 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 April 2024
Keywords:
Alarm, Awareness, BIS, Prevention, Volatile, pEEG
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 492494
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492494
ISSN: 2515-7949
PURE UUID: ff89d72c-7e54-423c-9973-7f0a4642c7d6
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Date deposited: 30 Jul 2024 16:33
Last modified: 31 Jul 2024 01:56
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Contributors
Author:
Katie L. Preston
Author:
Alexander I.R. Jackson
Corporate Author: the SPARC investigators
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