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Day surgery is defined as surgery where patient discharge occurs on the same day as admission. Twenty-three-hour discharge and enhanced recovery have the same underlying principles as day surgery but are considered separately.
Organisations such as the British Association for Day Surgery (BADS), working with the RCoA and the Association of Anaesthetists, have been central in moving day surgery services forward to encompass more operations and include more complex patients. Their ethos is to change the mindset towards offering day surgery to all until proven otherwise.
The benefits of day surgery for the patient include reduced hospital-acquired infection rates, improved recovery in familiar surroundings and earlier postoperative mobilisation, thereby reducing thromboembolic complications. The benefits for health services include reduction in cost per patient episode and more inpatient bed availability for patients needing major operations and longer hospital stays. Some healthcare systems incentivise day surgery through collection of higher tariffs for same-day surgery patients than inpatients.
Success in day surgery requires a multidisciplinary approach with dedicated teams applying day surgery techniques in surgery, anaesthesia, preoperative and postoperative care to promote same-day discharge by minimising complications. Patients should follow a day surgery pathway to enhance efficiency ( Fig. 34.1 ). Anaesthetic involvement in each step along the pathway promotes success.
Anaesthetic involvement in each step along the pathway promotes success.
If efficiently carried out early in the patient pathway, preoperative assessment has a key role in the success and safety of day surgery.
A nurse-based team in the day-case unit, coordinated by a consultant anaesthetist, allows development of robust local protocols for the investigation and management of complex patients. Specific training for staff and a consultant with specialty interest in day surgery maintains quality and can improve patient outcomes. Access to specialty support services such as pharmacy, laboratory analysis and radiology is essential.
Preoperative assessment is covered in detail in Chapter 19 . Particular issues pertinent to day surgery include identification of patient or surgical factors that make day surgery unsuitable, diagnosis of new conditions such as obstructive sleep apnoea that if managed preoperatively can still allow successful day surgery and addressing postoperative expectations and postdischarge care.
The final aim is a decision on patient suitability for day surgery. Suitability for day surgery now avoids narrow prescriptive limits like age, ASA physical class and BMI and uses individual approaches to expand the number of patients offered day surgery.
Criteria can still be divided into social, medical and surgical factors.
The patient needs suitable conditions at home for postoperative care and access to a telephone in case of complications.
A responsible adult carer is recommended to escort the patient home and remain with the patient for 24 h after a general anaesthetic.
Travelling distance from hospital less than 60 min is recommended for operations where serious postoperative haemorrhage may be a risk, such as tonsillectomy.
The patient (and/or carer) should understand the nature of the surgery and its implications, including complications which may occur at home.
Offering day surgery to patients with complex medical needs is now well established. Intense preoperative management with involvement of a consultant anaesthetist may be necessary but can produce good outcomes for same-day discharge. Anaesthetic involvement in patient selection is recommended to develop local protocols and management strategies for complex patients and communicate with other specialties including surgical consultants to improve the efficiency of the process and minimise cancellation on the day of surgery.
A detailed history and examination should determine suitability for day surgery.
Patients who are ASA physical class 3. Patients with stable, optimised disease have no contraindication to day surgery, with no increase in the incidence of postoperative complications, unplanned admissions or unplanned contact with healthcare services. Appropriate anaesthetic techniques help to maximise the chance of discharge home. Local anaesthetic techniques may give the best outcome.
Obesity (BMI > 30 kg m –2 ). Obesity does not preclude successful day surgery. Assessment of associated comorbidities, rather than BMI in isolation, will define suitability. Postoperative complications increase with central obesity and the metabolic syndrome. Case reports exist for successful day surgery in patients with a BMI greater than 60 kg m –2 with careful preplanning, availability of specific equipment and good team communication. Guidelines for anaesthesia in the obese surgical patient should be applied (discussed in detail in Chapter 32 ). Patients need to understand postoperative expectations and the necessary procedures for success.
Cardiovascular disease. Stable ischaemic heart disease may be managed in day surgery. Careful review of functional capacity and symptoms is necessary preoperatively, with further investigations and optimisation of disease if appropriate (see Chapter 19 ). Preoperative assessment should aim to identify cases of severe aortic valve stenosis, cardiomyopathies, severe ventricular dysfunction, pulmonary hypertension and arrhythmias, as these may lead to perioperative critical incidents if undiagnosed. Atrial fibrillation, once rate control is achieved, is not a contra-indication to day surgery. Patients taking anticoagulants and antiplatelet therapy should be managed in the usual way (see Chapter 19 ). Patients at high risk of thrombotic events who require bridging therapy with low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH) can often have this organised via day surgery in conjunction with primary care. Pacemakers are not a contraindication to day surgery if the team and anaesthetist are aware and a plan in case of failure is prepared.
Respiratory disease . Patients with severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) may be managed in day surgery, especially if the operation is amenable to a regional or nerve block technique. Pulmonary function tests can help to quantify severity of disease and current exacerbations should be excluded preoperatively. Patients with mild obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) and those with severe OSA on established CPAP therapy can usually be managed in day surgery.
Endocrine disease. Patients with well-controlled diabetes mellitus, even those on insulin, can be safely managed as day cases. Diabetic control should be assessed by glycosylated haemoglobin levels; National guidance for the perioperative management of diabetes recommends that elective surgery should be postponed if HbA1 C concentrations are greater than 69 mmol mol –1 . Communication with the primary care team or diabetologists may be necessary to improve control, and patients with severe hypoglycaemic attacks may not be suitable. Diabetic complications such as renal disease should be identified early. Precise patient information (verbal and written) is essential, with an individual patient plan for the perioperative management of diabetic medication and postoperative effects on blood sugars clearly documented. Many regimens are available for the perioperative management of diabetes; the simplest puts the patient first on the morning list, omitting his or her morning medication whilst fasting, then taking the usual diabetic medication with a light breakfast after the operation. Perioperative diabetic management is discussed in greater detail in Chapter 20 .
Hepatic/renal dysfunction. Patients with cirrhosis are not suitable for day surgery because of increased perioperative mortality rates. Milder liver function test abnormalities are usually not a problem. Renal dysfunction does not prohibit day surgery, but careful assessment of associated comorbidities is required and appropriate anaesthetic agents used (see Chapters 11 and 20 ). Regional techniques have been used to allow vascular access procedures for dialysis to be done as a day case.
Rheumatoid disease. The issues regarding preoperative assessment and cessation of disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs are discussed in Chapters 19 and 20 .
Chronic pain. Patients with chronic pain (see Chapter 24 ) should be identified early in the pathway and a perioperative analgesic plan determined in conjunction with the patient.
Dementia. Patients with dementia often make a better postoperative recovery in their own home. A perioperative plan should be agreed on during preoperative assessment so carers are clear about the proposed pathway.
Paediatrics. Children are often suitable for day surgery. They should be aged 60 weeks and older postconceptual age without significant lung disease or apnoeas (see Chapter 33 ).
Operations deemed suitable for day surgery are ever expanding. The BADS directory now contains more than 200 recommended operations, and more complex operations in specialties such as breast surgery, otolaryngology and orthopaedic and endocrine surgery are also being developed as day surgery procedures. A team approach is necessary to introduce new operations to day surgery to minimise surgical complications and produce guidelines for optimal management. The principles guiding surgical suitability are outlined in Box 34.1 .
Should have the ability to control haemorrhage.
Low risk of postoperative bleeding or cardiovascular instability.
Surgery should not produce large fluid shifts.
Allows rapid return to oral intake after surgery.
Patient is able to mobilise safely postoperatively.
No prolonged period of observation is required.
Postoperative pain controllable with oral analgesics.
If abdominal or thoracic cavities are entered, minimally invasive techniques should be used.
Emergency surgery is also moving into the day surgery arena. Designated lists for abscesses or minor hand surgery are produced where patients are discharged after initial presentation but rapidly return for scheduled surgery. Other pathways are evolving for acute cholecystitis treated with day surgery laparoscopic cholecystectomy and for patients with uncomplicated laparoscopic appendectomy to be allowed home on the same day as their surgery.
Although preoperative assessment should produce a patient ready for surgery, each patient should be seen by the anaesthetist on the day of admission to discuss anaesthetic techniques, assess the airway, provide postoperative instructions (including analgesia) and address any anxiety issues the patient may have.
Anaesthetic techniques influence successful patient outcomes. The aim is for a rapid return of full cognitive function, oral intake and mobilisation, taking into account the patient's comorbidities, predicted difficulties and patient wishes where possible.
Techniques include sedation, general anaesthesia and regional techniques, which may include peripheral nerve or plexus blocks. Combinations work well in certain circumstances.
Facilities for anaesthesia should be equivalent to those for inpatient anaesthesia, with standard monitoring and equipment available and the same trained anaesthetic assistance and recovery care available for any general anaesthetic, regional technique or sedation performed.
Anaesthetic agents for general anaesthesia should have rapid onset and offset for clear-headed emergence, with minimal drowsiness, nausea, vomiting or dizziness in the postoperative period. The aim is to get back to street fitness for home discharge.
When used as part of a balanced anaesthesia regimen, volatile agents with a rapid offset such as sevoflurane or desflurane (see Chapter 3 ) can lead to more rapid recovery of consciousness and thus avoid bottlenecks and delays in stage 1 recovery. Low-flow techniques should be applied as a routine to reduce costs.
Propofol is a widely used induction agent because of useful properties such as reduction of laryngeal reflexes for SAD insertion, antiemetic properties and reasonably rapid offset with little hangover effect (see Chapter 4 ). Total intravenous anaesthesia with propofol, which is discussed in detail in Chapter 4 , is useful for many day surgery procedures, especially when the risk of PONV is high. Appropriate equipment, such as target-controlled infusion (TCI) pumps and processed EEG monitors, should be available.
Multimodal approaches are widely advocated for day surgery to achieve good analgesia for discharge and minimise the use of long-acting opioids. Use of multiple non-opioid drugs with diverse modes of action, including NSAIDs, paracetamol and local anaesthetics, make this possible.
Premedication protocols have become a popular way of beginning the multimodal approach to analgesia. The administration of oral paracetamol and a modified-release NSAID (e.g. diclofenac 75 mg or ibuprofen 800 mg) have a synergistic opioid-sparing effect. A loading dose of paracetamol (2 g orally) may achieve greater efficacy in reaching therapeutic plasma concentrations.
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