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Silent myocardial ischaemia in diabetic patients after general anaesthesia with 24 h intravenous opioids or with epidural analgesia

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Last updated: 31 Dec 2024

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Abstract

Objective
To evaluate the effect of general anaesthesia with either continuous i.v. opioids (G/O) or thoracic epidural analgesia (G/EP) on postoperative transient myocardial ischaemia (TMI) in type 2 diabetic patients undergoing open cholecystectomy.
Methodology
This randomised controlled study was conducted on 50 patients with D.M. Patients were divided into G/O group or G/EP group. All patients had negative stress exercise test and at least two cardiac risks preoperatively. Epidural analgesia was established by 15 ml of ropivacaine 0.2% with fentanyl 2 μg/ml followed by 5–8 ml/h of ropivacaine 0.1% with fentanyl 1 μg for 24 h postoperatively. Both studied groups received same general anaesthesia. Continuous i.v. fentanyl 100 μg/h was given intraoperatively in group G/O followed by i.v. morphine PCA. Primary outcome measured postoperative TMI using 24 h continuous ST segment analysis, endothelin-1(ET-1), troponin T, creatine kinase MB (CK-MB), and CKMB/CK preoperatively, 8 h and 24 h postoperatively. Second outcome measured dynamic stress (perioperative heart rate, blood pressure and postoperative pain).
Results
Endothelin-1 was above cutoff level preoperatively and rose up dramatically postoperatively in both studied groups. G/EP attenuated ET-1 elevation than G/O. Troponin T and CK-MB did not rise postoperatively in both studied groups. Postoperative CK-MB/ CK ratio was higher than 10% in 12 and eight patients in group G/O and G/EP, respectively. Twelve cardiac ischaemic events were noticed in four patients in group G/O and four events in two patients in group G/EP without significant difference in total duration of ischaemia between groups. G/EP lowered HR more significantly intraoperatively and gave better pain control for 4 h postoperatively. In conclusion, D.M was associated with high ET-1 level. Upper abdominal surgery increased ET-1 release. G/EP attenuated ET-1 release more than G/O and produced more stable haemodynamic parameters and less postoperative pain. No superior cardioprotective effect was noticed in G/EP over G/O.

DOI

10.1016/j.egja.2011.07.007

Keywords

Uncomplicated D.M type 2, Postoperative transient cardiac ischaemia, Endothelin-1, Cardiac biomarkers, General anaesthesia with continuous thoracic epidural analgesia

Authors

First Name

Sahar Ahmed

Last Name

Elkaradawy

MiddleName

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Affiliation

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Orcid

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First Name

Hisham Salah

Last Name

Elbanawy

MiddleName

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Affiliation

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Email

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City

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Orcid

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First Name

Kamal

Last Name

Mahmoud

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

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Email

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City

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Orcid

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Volume

27

Article Issue

4

Related Issue

51172

Issue Date

2011-10-01

Receive Date

2011-06-17

Publish Date

2011-10-01

Page Start

279

Page End

286

Print ISSN

1110-1849

Online ISSN

1687-1804

Link

https://egja.journals.ekb.eg/article_388125.html

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https://egja.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=388125

Order

388,125

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Egyptian Journal of Anaesthesia

Publication Link

https://egja.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Silent myocardial ischaemia in diabetic patients after general anaesthesia with 24 h intravenous opioids or with epidural analgesia

Details

Type

Article

Created At

21 Dec 2024