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Department of Anesthesia, Toronto Western Hospital, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Frances Chung, FRCPC, Professor, Department of Anesthesia, Toronto Western Hospital, 399 Bathurst St. EC2-046, Toronto, Ontario M5T 2S8, Canada. Address e-mail to frances.chung{at}uhn.on.ca
| Abstract |
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IMPLICATIONS: The residual effects of the short-acting general anesthetics desflurane and propofol on patients balance function during recovery after surgery were assessed with a computerized force platform. The results showed that desflurane seemed to be associated with better postural control than propofol in the early recovery period.
| Introduction |
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Postural stability, measured by using a force platform, is useful in assessment of anesthetic residual effects and balance disturbances after general anesthesia and sedation (46). We hypothesized that anesthetic techniques with desflurane or propofol may have different qualitative effects on patients postural stability; these effects can be detected with an objective and sensitive assessment tool. Because desflurane usually has a shorter emergence time than propofol, we assumed that desflurane may be superior to propofol with respect to the recovery of balance control. Therefore, we designed this study to evaluate balance function by using a computerized force platform, Balance Master (NeuroCom International, Inc., Clackamas, OR), in outpatients after desflurane- and propofol-based anesthetics.
| Methods |
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After preoxygenation with 100% oxygen, anesthesia was induced with fentanyl 1 µg/kg IV and propofol 2 mg/kg IV. Laryngoscopy and tracheal intubation were facilitated with mivacurium 0.2 mg/kg IV. After tracheal intubation, according to a computer-generated random number table, anesthesia was maintained either with a propofol 50200 µg · kg-1 · min-1 IV infusion or with desflurane 3%5% end-tidal (ET) inhaled in combination with nitrous oxide 60%70% in oxygen. All patients were mechanically ventilated to maintain an ET carbon dioxide concentration of 32 to 36 mm Hg. Intermittent bolus doses of mivacurium 0.050.1 mg/kg IV were administered to maintain adequate muscle relaxation during surgery. Supplemental fentanyl 50-µg IV boluses were administered to treat persistent increases in heart rate (>100 bpm) or mean blood pressure (>30% of the preanesthesia baseline) values despite a maximal IV infusion rate (200 µg · kg-1 · min-1) in the Propofol group and maximal ET concentrations (5%) in the Desflurane group. All patients received ketorolac 30 mg IV and metoclopramide 10 mg IV approximately 30 min before the end of surgery for analgesic and antiemetic prophylaxis, respectively. In addition, 10 mL of bupivacaine 0.25% was injected to the surgical portals. Upon completion of the operation, residual neuromuscular block was reversed with neostigmine 2.5 mg and glycopyrrolate 0.4 mg IV when necessary, and the maintenance anesthetic was discontinued.
Emergence times were determined at 1-min intervals from discontinuation of the general anesthetic to awakening (i.e., opening eyes on verbal command) and orientation (i.e., correctly stating the date, place, and person). Upon arrival in the postanesthesia care unit, Post-Anesthesia Discharge Score (PADS) (7) was assessed at 15-min intervals until the time the patient was clinically judged "home ready" (i.e., the PADS score reached 910). Postoperative pain, nausea, drowsiness, and dizziness were evaluated at 30-min intervals by using 10-point self-assessing verbal scores (0 = none, 10 = worst imaginable) until the time of discharge home. Rescue medication for pain included fentanyl 25- to 50-µg IV boluses or acetaminophen-codeine compound (i.e., Tylenol No. 3), one or two tablets. Postoperative nausea and vomiting were treated with metoclopramide 10 mg or an ondansetron 4-mg IV bolus.
Postural stability was measured with a computerized force platform, Balance Master. The Balance Master system is mobile equipment (capable of bedside measurement) consisting of dual static force plates and a computerized monitor. Each footplate rests on two force transducers, with the sensitive axes oriented vertically. The transducers in turn provide input to the computer. The software program filters the center of pressure data and then calculates, tracks, and displays the center of gravity (COG) on the monitor. Data from the assessments can be recorded and reviewed on screen or printed out, in the forms of COG sway or moving velocity (degrees per second).
The COG sway velocity under the following four conditions was measured: 1) standing on a firm surface with eyes open, 2) standing on a firm surface with eyes closed, 3) standing on a foam surface with eyes open, and 4) standing on a foam surface with eyes closed (Foam-EC). These measurements were made at three time points: 1) before anesthesia, 2) immediately after a PADS score of 9, and 3) at actual discharge home. The research assistant who performed postoperative assessments was not aware of what general anesthetics were administered to the study patients.
Before the study was initiated, a power analysis was performed on the basis of the results of testing a population of clinically asymptomatic subjects with postural stability assessment on the Balance Master (8). According to the results, the mean of the COG sway velocity at Foam-EC in subjects aged 2069 yr is 1.49 ± 0.45 degrees per second (± SD). With this estimate, the detection of a 20% clinically relevant difference in this primary end point between the two treatment groups requires 49 subjects per group (
= 0.05, ß = 0.1) to be evaluated (statistical software: nQuery AdvisorTM 1.0; Statistical Solutions, Boston, MA). The unpaired (two-sample) and paired (one-sample) Students t-tests were performed for comparisons of all continuous variables between and within the study groups, respectively; the Kruskal-Wallis test was performed for comparisons of patient self-assessing verbal scores; and the
2 test with Yates continuity correction, as appropriate, was performed for comparisons of other nonparametric variables, such as the incidence of postoperative side effects. Data are expressed as mean values ± SD, and P values of <0.05 were considered statistically significant.
| Results |
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The two treatment groups were comparable with respect to age, weight, height, ASA physical status, duration of surgery and anesthesia, intraoperative drug dosages, and fluid volumes (Table 1). The baseline values of Balance Master scores (Table 2), as well as patients self-assessing verbal scores for pain, nausea, drowsiness, and dizziness at any pre- and postoperative assessment times, were similar in the two study groups (Table 3).
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At the time patients first achieved a PADS score of 9, the COG sway velocities under the four testing conditions were all significantly (P < 0.01) increased above their baselines in all study patients (Table 2). However, there were no differences between the two study groups except for the values under the condition of Foam-EC. The average increases of the COG sway velocity in Foam-EC at this time were 20.5% vs 44.5% (P < 0.05) above the baseline values in the Desflurane and Propofol groups, respectively (Fig. 1). By the time of patients actual discharge home, all the COG sway velocities returned to >85% baseline values, and no difference was found between the two study groups (Table 2). An average of 70 min between patients achieving a PADS score of 9 and home discharge was used for patient instruction, patient drinking and eating, waiting for escorts, and changing clothes.
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| Discussion |
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0.75). Reliability and validity of measures obtained from 20 stroke patients by using Balance Master suggest that test-retest reliability of data is great for complex tests of balance (13). In this study, patients postural stability was assessed with Balance Masters Static Sway Test, Modified Clinical Test for Sensory Interaction on Balance (14). At the time patients were first able to start walking without assistance after surgery, the balance function measured with Balance Master was significantly impaired compared with the preanesthesia values. Among the four testing conditions, standing on the foam surface with eyes closed had significantly more body sway velocity in the Propofol group compared with the Desflurane group.
A significant increase of the body sway in patients after desflurane- and propofol-based anesthetics at the time of a PADS score of 9 indicates that achieving clinical home discharge criteria, especially within an hour after general anesthetics, may not guarantee the complete restoration of patients balance function. On the criteria of ambulation in PADS, a full score of 2 is given to a patient able to ambulate with a steady gait. This is a clinical score, and the criteria may not determine full recovery of the balance function of a patient. Steward and Volgyesi (9) used a stabilimeter to measure changes in the activity of postural muscles during the later stages of recovery from halothane anesthesia in a series of healthy pediatric outpatients and reported that the postural muscle activity was normalized 75 minutes after the anesthetic. Ledin et al. (15) used a computerized dynamic posturography to study postural control before and after propofol anesthesia in patients undergoing microlaryngoscopy. They found that the equilibrium performance returned to baseline values within two hours.
The greater body sway velocity in the Propofol group than the Desflurane group under the condition of eyes closed on a foam surface may indicate that propofol-based anesthetics are associated with more vestibular disturbances. Patients in this testing condition had only vestibular information available and accurate; their visual information was unavailable, and somatosensory information was inaccurate. Patients in the Desflurane group had more postural stability than the Propofol group, which indicates that they may have less difficulty using vestibular information for balance control. This may be caused by a more rapid and complete elimination of central nervous effects after desflurane than propofol. Other factors, including residual nitrous oxide, fentanyl, mivacurium, prophylactic antiemetic, and so on, may also have combined effects with desflurane and propofol. In an early study using a force plate system to test patients postural stability after IV thiopental or propanidid, Eriksen et al. (16) reported that a significant increase in body sway in the sagittal direction occurred three hours after the termination of anesthesia.
One of the criticisms of this study is whether the two study groups were given comparable anesthetics. It was unfortunate that the Bispectral index monitor was not used to ensure comparable depth of hypnosis with the two anesthetic techniques. However, the general anesthetics were delivered according to the standard clinical criteria (e.g., vital signs). The propofol average infusion rate of 110 µg · kg-1 · min-1 may have a different intraoperative Bispectral index value to desfluranes average ET concentration of 3.2%. The value, however, might be comparable in terms of adequate depth of anesthesia for the procedure, according to the similar intraoperative analgesic requirements and comparable awakening time to other reported studies of the two general anesthetics. Another concern about the study includes the effects of nitrous oxide on the middle ear and possible vestibular influence of antiemetics. However, these effects were balanced between the two study groups because of the randomized assignment and similar antiemetic treatment. Thus, the possibility of bias is minimal.
The assessment of postural stability by using qualitative and quantitative measurements may be of value in the assessment and documentation of exact variables of postanesthetic and postanalgesic recovery. It may be recommended in the objective assessment of residual effects of old and new anesthetic and analgesic regimens used in ambulatory surgical procedures. In our experience, the Balance Master test could provide a simple and objective evaluation of postural stability. It is a more practicable research tool in the routine clinical setting compared with complicated methods such as psychomotor test batteries or driving simulators. However, we do not suggest that the Balance Master test would replace more traditional measures of home readiness, such as the PADS system, after ambulatory anesthesia. This test may not be suitable for obtaining clinical criteria because it is difficult to identify which scores would correlate with home-readiness. Also, these scores are sensitive to minor postural disturbances, and a patient may not need to wait for a fully resumed balance function before discharge home. In addition, this test requires patients to be measured multiple times, it is cumbersome and time-consuming, and patients may not cooperate.
In conclusion, a computerized force platform provided a sensitive and objective assessment of balance function in terms of postural stability. Patients undergoing minor surgical procedures who have met the clinical discharge criteria (judged with PADS score) shortly after general anesthetics may still have impaired balance function. Finally, a desflurane-based anesthetic seemed to be associated with less vestibular disturbance than a propofol-based anesthetic in the early recovery period.
| Footnotes |
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