Pre-operative Cardiac Risk Assessment for Non

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Transcript Pre-operative Cardiac Risk Assessment for Non

Epidemiology of Noncardiac Surgery

Dr. Mohammed Naser

Overview

Important Decision points:

Urgent vs Elective Surgery

High risk surgery vs intermediate vs low -Active Cardiac Condition vs non-active Functional capacity on basis of pt ablility To perform certain activities

The Search For High Risk

Methods for Assessing Risk Pre-Operatively

Is the surgery emergency PROCEED and manage post operatively according to AHA& ACC guidelines

If the surgery emergency..??

Active/Major Cardiac Conditions

Unstable Coronary Conditions

Decompensated CHF

Significant arrhythmias (i.e. 3⁰HB, new Vtach)

Severe Valvular Disease (aortic stenosis >40 mm hg gradient or valve area <1.0cm

)???????

Non-Active Cardiac Factors

• • • • • •

Intermediate Risk Hx of CHD History of prior CHF Hx of stroke Diabetes Renal insufficiency

• • • • •

Minor Risk* Age > 70 Abnormal ECG Nonsinus rhythm Uncontrolled systolic BP

* Not associated with cardiac risk

Six Independent predictors of cardiac risk 1) ischemic heart disease 2) congestive heart failure 3) cerebrovascular disease 4) high risk surgery (AAA, orthopedic sx) 5) pre-operative insulin tx for diabetes 6) preoperative creatinine for creat > 2 mg/dL

Lee et al

Functional capacity

Functional Capacity

• • •

Functional status has shown to be a reliable periop and long-term predictor of cardiac events MET: metabolic equivalent resting oxygen consumption of 70 kg, 40 yr old man at rest Periop risk is increased if person cannot > 4 METS

1 MET 4 MET 10 MET

The Trump Card:

Functional Capacity

Perioperative cardiac risk is increased in patients unable to exercise 4 METs

Functional capacity can be estimated in the office

Energy expenditure for eating, dressing, walking around house, dishwashing ranges from 1-4 METs

Climbing a flight of stairs, running a short distance, scrubbing floors, and golf ranges from 4-10 METs

Swimming and singles tennis exceeds 10 METs

Type

High Intermediate risk Low

Surgery Risk Type

Cardiac risk

> 5% 1-5% <1%

examples

Aortic, peripheral vasc sx Intraperitoneal Intrathoracic Carotid End Head and neck Orthopedic Sx Prostate Sx Endoscopic procedures Superficial Cataract Sx Breast Sx Ambulatory Sx

Surgery-Specific Risk: High Risk*

• •

Major emergency surgery Vascular surgery including: aortic surgery, infra-inguinal bypass

Prolonged surgery with large fluid shifts or blood loss * Reported risk of cardiac death or nonfatal MI >5%

Stepwise Approach

Step 1: Determine urgency of surgery

Step 2: Active cardiac condition? →test

Step 3: Undergoing low-risk surgery? < 1%*

Step 4: Good functional capacity?

* Combined morbidity and mortality < 1% even in high risk patients

The Catheterization Questions to Ask Yourself

Does this patient have symptomatic coronary disease that will have a mortality benefit from revascularization now?

Am I willing to send the patient to CABG?

Am I doing this just to know the anatomy?

Is pre-op coronary revasc advantageous?

If high risk surgery and patient has active

cardiac issue

Functional test and perfusion Imaging and if

L main 50% or 3 VD, 2VD + LAD Prox, LVEF < 20%, aortic stenosis – consider revasc pre-op

STENTS

If upcoming Sx is known then PTCA alone or BMS with 4-6 wks dual antiplatelet tx after If received DES....

1) postpone sx until > 12 months,

2) do sx on both asa+clop

3) do sx on single ap tx

Use of a DES for coronary revascularization before imminent or planned non cardiac sx that will necessitate d/c of antiplatelet

agents is not recommended

Medical tx

1) beta blockers-if on keep them if not.... 2) Statins continue, ? Start -need randomized trials

Other Issues

DVT/PE prophylaxis

Anesthetic technique-volatile agent with general anesthetic function >> propofol, midazolam, balanced anesthesia (Grade B)

No evidence that epidural anesthesia >>general anesthesia for cardiac outcomes

Routine troponin monitoring not recommended

Surveillance for Perioperative Myocardial Infarction

ECGs

All intermediate and high-risk patients should get a post-op ECG.

As need for signs or symptoms of ischemia

Troponin / CK

In patients with signs or symptoms of ischemia

Do not do screening biomarkers

High Risk Features

Severe obstructive or restrictive pulmonary disease

Diabetes

Renal impairment

Anemia, polycythemia, thrombocytosis

PCI pre-op

ST-elevation MI

Unstable angina

Non ST elevation MI

2007 ACC/AHA Perioperative Guidelines

Take Home Messages

Take Home Messages

Unstable syndromes require management prior to surgery. Look for

Unstable angina

Signs of heart failure

Stenotic valve lesions

Ventricular arrhythmias

Functional tolerance is the best single predictor of outcome

Be very specific in your history (one step at at time, regular or slow pace, etc)

If patient on beta blockers & statins continue them, more trials to mandate them

PCI/CABG only if patient needs it independent of surgery. Think twice because of stent data and delays.