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50484

Surgical Field Visibility during Functional Endoscopic Sinus Surgery: Esmolol-induced Hypotensive Anesthesia versus Hypotensive Total Intravenous Anesthesia

Article

Last updated: 22 Jan 2023

Subjects

-

Tags

Otorhinolaryngology

Abstract

Background: Functional endoscopic sinus surgery is widely practiced during daily otorhinolaryngology practice. It usually done under low blood pressure. However, the ideal hypotensive drug or technique is yet not well established.
Aim of the work: To evaluate outcome of functional endoscopic sinus surgery under esmolol-induced hypotensive anesthesia [EHA] versus hypotensive total intravenous anesthesia [H-TIVA].
Patients & Methods: 72 patients were randomly divided into two groups; Group A: H-TIVA and Group B [EHA]. After induction of anesthesia, remifentanil/ propofol and esmolol infusions were adjusted to maintain mean arterial pressure at 60-70 mmHg. After completion of surgical procedure, esmolol infusion was stopped, while remifentanil/propofol infusions were adjusted to allow restoration of blood pressure. Operative field bleeding and visibility were graded using Fromme scale. Primary outcome is the efficacy of EHA to minimize intraoperative bleeding to an extent that allows satisfactory completion of surgery.
Results: Esmolol bolus significantly attenuated pressor reflexes to induction and intubation than induction by remifentanil. Intraoperative [IO] heart rate and MAP measures were significantly lower with EHA. At 10-minures after infusion stoppage, patients of group B still had significantly lower HR and MAP, while at 10-min later, the difference was non-significant. HA minimized IO blood loss down to no to slight bleeding in 16.7% and 55.5% of studied patients and improved field visibility to satisfactory-to-good levels in 51.4% and 43.1% of surgeries, respectively. Moreover, EHA provided better field visibility, so allowed significant reduction of operative time than with TIVA.
Conclusion: Hypotensive anesthesia is safe and appropriate modality for FESS and improves surgical and clinical outcome. Both esmolol and remifentanil provided satisfactory results. Esmolol is superior to remifentanil.

DOI

10.21608/ijma.2019.16039.1023

Keywords

Esmolol hypotensive anesthesia, Hypotensive total intravenous anesthesia, Intraoperative bleeding, Operative field visibility

Authors

First Name

Mostafa

Last Name

Ahmed

MiddleName

Eid Mohamed

Affiliation

Anesthesia and Intensive Care Department, Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar University (Assuit)

Email

mostafaeidicu79@gmail.com

City

-

Orcid

-

First Name

Mahmoud

Last Name

Elsayed

MiddleName

Mohamed

Affiliation

Anesthesia and Intensive Care Department, Faculty of Medicine; Al-Azhar University

Email

mahmoud_elgohary@yahoo.com

City

-

Orcid

-

First Name

Nabil

Last Name

Sarhan

MiddleName

Abdelghany

Affiliation

Otorhinolaryngology, Al-Azhar faculty of Medicine (Damietta)

Email

nabelent@yahoo.com

City

Damietta

Orcid

-

First Name

Mohamed

Last Name

Fathallah

MiddleName

Abdelkawy

Affiliation

Otorhinolaryngology Department, Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar University (Damietta)

Email

mnegeib@yahoo.com

City

-

Orcid

-

Volume

1

Article Issue

2

Related Issue

6967

Issue Date

2019-10-01

Receive Date

2019-08-20

Publish Date

2019-10-01

Page Start

110

Page End

118

Print ISSN

2636-4174

Online ISSN

2682-3780

Link

https://ijma.journals.ekb.eg/article_50484.html

Detail API

https://ijma.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=50484

Order

9

Type

Original Article

Type Code

816

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

International Journal of Medical Arts

Publication Link

https://ijma.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

-

Details

Type

Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023