In order to recognize complications, anesthetists should have extensive knowledge about monitoring machines, anesthetic drugs, anesthesia machines, etc. Complications can be related to the respiratory system, cardiovascular systems, mechanical system, and human error. In Part I, complications due to respiratory and cardiovascular systems will be reviewed.
Respiratory Complications
Apnea
Possible causes
Anesthetic drugs: Anesthetic drugs suppress respiration in a dose-dependent manner. Suppressed respiration can be seen during induction when a high dose of anesthetics is used.
Recent hyperventilation: CO2 is a driving gas for respiration. Therefore, if CO2 is low due to recent hyperventilation, patients may stop breathing.
Treatments
A life-threatening situation should be confirmed.
If it is cardiac arrest, CPR should be initiated immediately.
Patients should be intubated when possible to provide 100% O2 and ventilation.
If recent hyperventilation is the cause, decreasing respiratory rate and volume (either from manual or mechanical ventilation) should be done.
Airway Obstruction
Clinical signs
Dyspnea
Stridor
Abdominal breathing
Possible causes
Laryngeal/bronchial spasm (cat)
Airway masses, edema, mucus blockage (anticholinergic use)
Kinking of endotracheal tube
Treatments
Use lidocaine prior to endotracheal intubation or bronchodilator (aminophylline) for spasm
Remove the causes (i.e., suction mucous)
Use armoured endotracheal tube
Use ETCO2 to monitor CO2 wave form
Hypoventilation (PaCO2 > 40 mm Hg)
Possible causes
CNS depression due to anesthetic depth or anesthetic drugs
Limited thoracic wall movement (pneumothorax, obesity, GDV, pregnancy)
Traumatic injuries, upper airway obstruction, etc.
Treatments
Correct the causes
Provide ventilation (manually or mechanically)
Hypoxemia (PaO2 < 60 mm Hg)
Possible causes
Hypoventilation - see above
Low inspired O2 - mechanical error
Ventilation perfusion mismatching or shunt
Treatments
Correct the causes
Provide 100% O2
Check anesthetic machine
Correct hypoventilation
Provide ventilation (manually or mechanically)
Complete surgery as soon as possible
Cardiovascular Complications
Hypotension
Clinical signs
Mean arterial blood pressure < 70 mm Hg
Systolic blood pressure < 80 mm Hg
Increased heart rate
Prolonged CRT
Weak pulses
Possible causes
Anesthetic overdose or high dose of anesthetics
Deep anesthetic depth
Hypovolemia or blood loss
Increased abdominal pressure (i.e., pregnancy, GDV, etc.)
Vasodilation (premedication, etc.)
Cardiac arrhythmia
Treatments
Decrease anesthetics (i.e., isoflurane level)
Lighten up anesthetic depth
Administer fluid prior to and during anesthesia; use fluid boluses (5–20 ml/kg) or blood transfusion when PCV < ~ 20%
Correct the causes for increased abdominal pressure or cardiac arrhythmia
Administer positive inotropic drugs (i.e., dobutamine [1–10 μg/kg/min], dopamine [1–10 μg/kg/min])
Premature Ventricular Contraction (PVC)
Possible causes
Anesthetics
High CO2 level
Hypoxia
High level of circulating catecholamine (i.e., due to excitement during induction)
Underlying cardiac problems
Treatments
Check anesthetic depth
Minimize the use of arrhythmogenic agents (i.e., thiopental or α-2 agonists)
Check PaO2, PaCO2 and provide ventilation as needed
Provide good premedication to minimize excitement
Treat PVCs with lidocaine 1–2 mg/kg IV if they are multifocal and they run multiple PVCs/min
Tachycardia
Possible causes
Too light anesthetic plane
Drugs (i.e., ketamine, anticholinergics, etc.)
Pain
CO2 retention
Hypotension
Treatments
Increase anesthetic plane
If it is due to drugs, monitor patients closely until drug effects subside
Treat pain with opioids
Check CO2 level, if CO2 is high increase respiratory rate and/or volume
For hypotension, please see hypotension
Bradycardia
Possible causes
Deep anesthetic plane
High vagal tone
Drugs (i.e., opioids, α-2 agonists, etc.)
Treatment
Lighten anesthetic plane
Administer anticholinergics (i.e., atropine 0.02–0.04 mg/kg) if high vagal tone or opioid use
For α-2 agonist use, administer anticholinergics if bradycardia is accompanied with hypotension
References
1. Seymour C, Duke-Novakovski T. BSAVA Manual of Canine and Feline Anaesthesia and Analgesia. 2nd ed. Gloucester, UK: British Small Animal Veterinary Association; 2007.
2. Greene SA. Veterinary Anesthesia and Pain Management Secrets. Philadelphia, PA: Hanley & Belfus; 2002:1–43.