Smith and Aitkenhead's Textbook of Anaesthesia

Anaesthesia outside the operating theatre

General anaesthesia outside the operating theatre suite is often challenging for the anaesthetist. Although the principles of remote site anaesthesia are common to many situations, each specialised environment poses its own unique problems. In hospital the anaesthetist must provide a…

Anaesthesia in resource-poor areas

Background The variation in resources available to healthcare systems in regional populations of the world is widely acknowledged. The terms developed and developing world mislead, suggesting binary options and inevitable progress to a complete state. The reality is a skewed…

Emergency and trauma anaesthesia

Patients scheduled for elective surgery are usually in optimal physical and mental condition, with a definitive surgical diagnosis; any coexisting medical disease is defined and well controlled. These patients have often discussed plans for surgery and anaesthesia (including postoperative care)…

Obstetric anaesthesia and analgesia

Obstetric anaesthesia and analgesia involve caring for women during childbirth in three situations: Provision of analgesia for labour, usually by epidural or spinal analgesic techniques Anaesthesia for peripartum operative procedures such as instrumental (e.g. forceps or Ventouse) or caesarean delivery…

Anaesthesia for cardiac surgery

In the UK and much of the developed world, more than half of all cardiac surgical procedures are undertaken to revascularise ischaemic myocardium. Of the remainder, surgery for acquired valvular disease, congenital anomalies and disorders of the great vessels comprise…

Anaesthesia for thoracic surgery

In thoracic anaesthesia there are a number of key areas that require specific consideration in the preoperative, intraoperative and postoperative phases of care. They include understanding of pulmonary anatomy, assessment of fitness for lung surgery, understanding the indications and methods…

Neurosurgical anaesthesia

Neurosurgical procedures include elective and emergency surgery of the CNS, its vasculature and the CSF, together with the surrounding bony structures, the skull and spine. Almost all require general anaesthesia; however, some procedures require an awake patient. In addition to…

Anaesthesia for vascular, endocrine and plastic surgery

Major vascular surgery Many aspects of vascular surgery have changed during the last two decades, largely as a result of advances in radiological practice and cardiology. Examples include improvements in the treatment of myocardial infarction, the development of endovascular aortic…

Ophthalmic anaesthesia

Patients who present for eye surgery are often at the extremes of age. Neonatal and geriatric anaesthesia both present special problems (see Chapters 33 and 31 , respectively). Some eye surgery may last many hours, and repeated anaesthetics at short…

Anaesthesia for ENT, maxillofacial and dental surgery

Ear, nose and throat (ENT), maxillofacial and dental surgical procedures account for a significant proportion of work in most anaesthetic departments. Recent cost–benefit and evidence-based analyses have reduced the number of common procedures performed, such as tonsillectomy, insertion of grommets…