We developed a protocol to procure lungs from uncontrolled donors after circulatory determination of death (NCT02061462). Subjects with cardiovascular collapse, treated on scene by a resuscitation team and transferred to the emergency room, are considered potential donors once declared dead. Exclusion criteria include unwitnessed collapse, no‐flow period of >15 min and low flow >60 min. After death, lung preservation with recruitment maneuvers, continuous positive airway pressure, and protective mechanical ventilation is applied to the donor. After procurement, ex vivo lung perfusion (EVLP) is performed. From November 2014, 10 subjects were considered potential donors; one of these underwent the full process of procurement, EVLP, and transplantation. The donor was a 46‐year‐old male who died because of thoracic aortic dissection. Lungs were procured 4 h and 48 min after death, and deemed suitable for transplantation after EVLP. Lungs were then offered to a rapidly deteriorating recipient with cystic fibrosis (lung allocation score [LAS] 46) who consented to the transplant in this experimental setting. Six months after transplantation, the recipient is in good condition (forced expiratory volume in 1 s 85%) with no signs of rejection. This protocol allowed procurement of lungs from an uncontrolled donor after circulatory determination of death following an extended period of warm ischemia.
Background
Obesity has become an increasing problem worldwide during the past few decades. Hence, surgeons and anaesthetists will care for an increasing number of obese patients in the foreseeable future, and should be prepared to provide optimal management for these individuals. This review provides an update of recent evidence regarding perioperative strategies for obese patients.
Methods
A search for papers on the perioperative care of obese patients (English language only) was performed in July 2019 using the PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science and Cochrane Library electronic databases. The review focused on the results of RCTs, although observational studies, meta‐analyses, reviews, guidelines and other reports discussing the perioperative care of obese patients were also considered. When data from obese patients were not available, relevant data from non‐obese populations were used.
Results and conclusion
Obese patients require comprehensive preoperative evaluation. Experienced medical teams, appropriate equipment and monitoring, careful anaesthetic management, and an adequate perioperative ventilation strategy may improve postoperative outcomes. Additional perioperative precautions are necessary in patients with severe morbid obesity, metabolic syndrome, untreated or severe obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome, or obesity hypoventilation syndrome; patients receiving home ventilatory support or postoperative opioid therapy; and obese patients undergoing open operations, long procedures or revisional surgery.
High-dose nitric oxide is a novel treatment associated with improved oxygenation and decreased tachypnea in pregnant patients with severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).
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