Title of article :
Anaesthesia for Ambulatory Paediatric Surgery: Common techniques and complications
Author/Authors :
Imarengiaye, C Departments of Anaesthesiology - and Surgery - University of Benin Teaching Hospital - Benin City, Nigeria , Osifo, D Departments of Anaesthesiology - and Surgery - University of Benin Teaching Hospital - Benin City, Nigeria , Tudjegbe, S Departments of Anaesthesiology - and Surgery - University of Benin Teaching Hospital - Benin City, Nigeria , Evbuomwan, I Departments of Anaesthesiology - and Surgery - University of Benin Teaching Hospital - Benin City, Nigeria
Abstract :
BACKGROUND: Ambulatory surgical care accounts for over
70% of elective procedures in Northern America. Ambulatory
paediatric surgical practice is not widespread in Nigeria. This
report examined clinical indicators for quality care in
paediatric ambulatory surgery using common outcomes after
day case procedures as benchmark.
METHODS: This was a cross-sectional study of children who
were presented for ambulatory surgical care in the University
of Benin Teaching Hospital. A standardized questionnaire was
employed to record the age, gender, indication for surgery,
type of anaesthesia, timelines for the surgery and associated
complications.
RESULTS: A total of 93 patients had surgical procedures on
ambulatory basis. The mean age of the patients was 4.1 ? 4.0yr
and duration of surgical procedure 31.3 ± 12.1 min. The male/
female ratio was 3:1, and herniotomy was the most frequent
procedure on ambulatory paediatric surgical care 60 (64.5%).
The common anaesthetic techniques employed in the paediatric
ambulatory setting were spontaneous respiration with face
mask 40 (43%), Inhalation technique with tracheal intubations
31 (33.3%), general anaesthesia with relaxant technique five
(5.4%), local infiltration with or without sedation eight (8.6%),
GA plus caudal block eight(8.6%), and subarachnoid block
one(1.1%). The indicators of quality care were unanticipated
admission (5.4%), repeat hospital visit (4.3%), readmission
(2.2%) and delayed discharge (21.5%).
CONCLUSION: The practices of paediatric surgery on
ambulatory services are feasible in our setting. The observable
complications are within acceptable limits. The timelines in
the scheduling and discharge appear not to be optimal for an
effective ambulatory service.
Keywords :
Outcome , Anaesthesia , Paediatric surgery , Ambulatory care
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics