Study objective: To characterize respiratory dynamics during emergence from propofol-remifentanil anesthesia using noninvasive respiratory inductance plethysmography (RIP).
Design: Observational pilot study.
Setting: Operating room in a university-affiliated teaching hospital.
Patients: 50 ASA physical status 1, 2, and 3 patients scheduled for microdirect laryngoscopy or bronchoscopy using total intravenous anesthesia (TIVA) with high-frequency jet ventilation.
Interventions: Patients were fitted with plethysmography bands around the chest and abdomen prior to induction. Following completion of surgery in patients undergoing brief airway procedures using propofol-remifentanil general anesthesia, the anesthetic infusions were stopped and ventilation suspended until resumption of spontaneous ventilation or desaturation below 90%. During this period of apnea, abdominal and thoracic girth was assessed with noninvasive RIP.
Measurements: Cross-sectional area of the thorax and abdomen during emergence were measured.
Main results: Useful data were obtained from 41 patients, with stable apnea lasting 404 ± 193.1 seconds; of these, 34 exhibited a slow and significant decrease in abdominal girth over a period of 267.8 ± 128.5 seconds. Resumption of spontaneous ventilation generally coincided with the end of this abdominal relaxation.
Conclusion: Slow expiration is the initial step in the resumption of spontaneous ventilation during apnea induced with TIVA using propofol-remifentanil.
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