In patients undergoing craniotomy, general anesthesia should be addressed to warrant good hypnosis, immobility, and analgesia, to ensure systemic and cerebral physiological status and provide the best possible surgical field. Regarding craniotomies, it is unclear if there are substantial differences in providing general anesthesia using total intravenous anesthesia (TIVA) or balanced anesthesia (BA) accomplished using the third generation halogenates. New evidence highlighted that the last generation of halogenated agents has possible advantages compared with intravenous drugs: rapid induction, minimal absorption and metabolization, reproducible pharmacokinetic, faster recovery, cardioprotective effect, and opioid spare analgesia. This review aims to report evidence related to the use of the latest halogenated agents in patients undergoing craniotomy and to present available clinical evidence on their effects: cerebral and systemic hemodynamic, neurophysiological monitoring, and timing and quality of recovery after anesthesia.

Badenes, R., Nato, C.g., Peña, J.d., Bilotta, F. (2021). Inhaled anesthesia in neurosurgery: Still a role?. BEST PRACTICE & RESEARCH. CLINICAL ANAESTHESIOLOGY, 35(2), 231-240 [10.1016/j.bpa.2020.10.004].

Inhaled anesthesia in neurosurgery: Still a role?

Bilotta, Federico
2021-01-01

Abstract

In patients undergoing craniotomy, general anesthesia should be addressed to warrant good hypnosis, immobility, and analgesia, to ensure systemic and cerebral physiological status and provide the best possible surgical field. Regarding craniotomies, it is unclear if there are substantial differences in providing general anesthesia using total intravenous anesthesia (TIVA) or balanced anesthesia (BA) accomplished using the third generation halogenates. New evidence highlighted that the last generation of halogenated agents has possible advantages compared with intravenous drugs: rapid induction, minimal absorption and metabolization, reproducible pharmacokinetic, faster recovery, cardioprotective effect, and opioid spare analgesia. This review aims to report evidence related to the use of the latest halogenated agents in patients undergoing craniotomy and to present available clinical evidence on their effects: cerebral and systemic hemodynamic, neurophysiological monitoring, and timing and quality of recovery after anesthesia.
2021
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore MEDS-23/A - Anestesiologia
English
PONV; craniotomy; inhalational halogenated agents; neurophysiological monitoring; recovery from anesthesia; time of awakening
Badenes, R., Nato, C.g., Peña, J.d., Bilotta, F. (2021). Inhaled anesthesia in neurosurgery: Still a role?. BEST PRACTICE & RESEARCH. CLINICAL ANAESTHESIOLOGY, 35(2), 231-240 [10.1016/j.bpa.2020.10.004].
Badenes, R; Nato, Cg; Peña, Jd; Bilotta, F
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/462175
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