Surgical approach (typical bariatric surgery context)
- Most common operations: laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG) and Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB); less commonly adjustable gastric band, biliopancreatic diversion/duodenal switch
- LSG: stapled longitudinal gastrectomy along bougie; removes fundus/greater curvature; leak risk at proximal staple line
- RYGB: small gastric pouch + gastrojejunostomy + jejunojejunostomy; internal hernia risk; marginal ulcer risk
- Usually laparoscopic: pneumoperitoneum (often 12–15 mmHg) + steep reverse Trendelenburg; occasional conversion to open
- Physiology: ↓FRC, ↑airway pressures, V/Q mismatch; ↑SVR and potential ↓venous return; CO2 absorption → hypercapnia
- DVT prophylaxis is routine (mechanical + pharmacological) and early mobilisation is a key surgical goal
Anaesthetic management (typical plan for morbid obesity / bariatric surgery)
- Type of anaesthesia: General anaesthesia is standard; neuraxial/RA mainly adjunct (e.g., TAP blocks) rather than sole technique for bariatric laparoscopy
- Airway: cuffed ETT preferred (aspiration risk, pneumoperitoneum, ventilation requirements); SGA generally avoided for bariatric laparoscopy
- Plan for difficult mask ventilation and difficult intubation; have videolaryngoscope and front-of-neck access plan
- Duration: typically 1.5–3.5 hours (varies with procedure, surgeon, BMI, adhesions, conversion to open)
- Pain: moderate (laparoscopic) to severe (open); multimodal opioid-sparing strategy is important due to OSA/OHS risk
- Analgesia options: paracetamol, NSAID (if appropriate), ketamine (low dose), dexmedetomidine, magnesium, local infiltration, TAP/rectus sheath blocks
- Post-op destination: PACU with enhanced monitoring; consider HDU/ICU if OHS, severe OSA, significant comorbidity, difficult airway, high opioid requirement, or complications
Definitions and risk stratification
- BMI: obesity ≥30; severe ≥35; morbid ≥40; super-obese ≥50; super-super ≥60 (useful for perioperative planning and equipment)
- Key syndromes: OSA (obstructive sleep apnoea), OHS (obesity hypoventilation syndrome: BMI ≥30 with daytime hypercapnia PaCO2 >6.0 kPa, after excluding other causes)
- OHS implies higher perioperative risk than OSA alone (pulmonary hypertension, RHF, sensitivity to sedatives/opioids)
- Functional assessment: exercise tolerance, stair climbing, symptoms of heart failure, angina, syncope; consider CPET if available for major surgery
Comorbidities and physiological changes (what matters to anaesthesia)
- Respiratory: ↓FRC and ERV, airway closure, atelectasis; ↑O2 consumption and CO2 production; rapid desaturation during apnoea; asthma/reflux common
- OSA/OHS: difficult mask ventilation, perioperative obstruction, sensitivity to sedatives/opioids; chronic hypoxia/hypercapnia → pulmonary HTN, RHF
- CVS: hypertension, LVH/diastolic dysfunction, IHD; increased blood volume and CO; arrhythmias; pulmonary hypertension in OHS/OSA
- GI: reflux/hiatus hernia; increased aspiration risk; non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) common (affects drug handling and bleeding risk if advanced)
- Metabolic: T2DM, dyslipidaemia; difficult IV access; increased VTE risk; pressure area injury risk; rhabdomyolysis risk with prolonged surgery/poor positioning
Preoperative assessment and optimisation
- History: OSA symptoms (snoring, witnessed apnoeas, daytime somnolence), CPAP use/adherence, previous anaesthetic airway difficulty, reflux, exertional dyspnoea/orthopnoea, VTE history, mobility
- Screening: STOP-BANG for OSA risk; consider ABG or VBG/ETCO2 surrogate if OHS suspected; ECG for all; echo if pulmonary HTN/RHF suspected
- Clues to OHS: raised serum bicarbonate, resting SpO2 low, polycythaemia, morning headaches, somnolence, signs of RHF
- Investigations: FBC/U&E/LFTs, HbA1c, group & save; consider spirometry if significant respiratory disease; pregnancy test if relevant
- Optimisation: ensure CPAP brought to hospital and used perioperatively; treat wheeze; manage reflux; VTE prophylaxis plan; discuss postoperative monitoring and analgesia strategy
- Fasting and aspiration prophylaxis: follow local guidelines; consider H2 blocker/PPI and sodium citrate in high-risk reflux; avoid heavy premedication
Equipment, staffing, and theatre preparation
- Environment: bariatric operating table (weight limit), wider trolley/bed, hover-mat/air-assisted transfer, adequate staff for moves, pressure-relieving surfaces
- Airway kit: videolaryngoscope, bougie/stylet, 2nd-gen SGA as rescue, fibreoptic scope, ramping aids, suction, difficult airway trolley, FONA kit
- Vascular access: ultrasound for IV and arterial/central access; long cannulas; consider arterial line if severe OHS/pulmonary HTN/major comorbidity or expected instability
- Monitoring: standard + consider capnography quality, temperature, neuromuscular monitoring mandatory; consider BIS/processed EEG if TIVA or high risk of awareness
Airway strategy (key FRCA content)
- Predictors: obesity alone is a poor predictor of difficult intubation, but increases risk of difficult mask ventilation; neck circumference and OSA correlate with difficulty
- Positioning: ramped/head-elevated laryngoscopy position (HELP) to align external auditory meatus with sternal notch; improves preoxygenation and laryngoscopy
- Preoxygenation: tight seal, 100% O2, head-up 25–30°, consider CPAP/pressure support; aim EtO2 >0.85–0.90; consider apnoeic oxygenation (nasal cannula)
- Induction: plan for rapid desaturation; have two-person mask ventilation; consider modified RSI (gentle ventilation) if high aspiration risk vs hypoxia risk
- Cricoid pressure: may worsen laryngoscopy/ventilation; apply correctly and release if impeding ventilation/intubation
- Extubation: fully awake, head-up, ensure full reversal and good respiratory mechanics; consider extubation to CPAP/NIV in OSA/OHS; plan for reintubation risk
Intraoperative ventilation and pneumoperitoneum
- Ventilation goals: maintain oxygenation, avoid atelectasis, avoid excessive pressures, manage CO2 load from pneumoperitoneum
- Strategy: lung-protective ventilation (e.g., tidal volume based on predicted/ideal body weight), moderate PEEP, recruitment manoeuvres as needed, adjust RR to maintain ETCO2/PaCO2
- Be cautious with recruitment/PEEP in haemodynamic compromise; consider arterial line/ABGs if severe OHS or CO2 retention
- Reverse Trendelenburg improves FRC and oxygenation but may reduce venous return; secure patient to avoid sliding and nerve injuries
Drug dosing in obesity (high-yield)
- Use the right size descriptor: Total body weight (TBW), Ideal body weight (IBW), Lean body weight (LBW), Adjusted body weight (AdjBW) depending on drug properties
- Induction agents: propofol induction often closer to LBW (avoid overdose); maintenance requirements can increase with TBW due to increased clearance/volume—titrate to effect
- Opioids: fentanyl/alfentanil often dosed to LBW and titrated; remifentanil uses IBW/LBW in most models (avoid TBW dosing to prevent hypotension/bradycardia)
- Neuromuscular blockers: suxamethonium dose to TBW (↑pseudocholinesterase and Vd); rocuronium/vecuronium often to IBW/LBW (avoid prolonged block); always monitor and reverse appropriately
- Reversal: sugammadex is typically dosed to actual body weight (TBW) per manufacturer (2/4/16 mg/kg depending on depth); ensure availability and cost considerations
- Antibiotics and thromboprophylaxis: may require weight-based dosing; follow local bariatric protocols (under-dosing risks SSI/VTE)
Fluids, haemodynamics, and monitoring
- IV fluids: avoid both hypovolaemia (AKI, hypotension) and overload (worsens oxygenation); consider goal-directed therapy for higher-risk cases
- Blood pressure cuff sizing is critical (miscuffing causes error); consider arterial line if non-invasive readings unreliable or rapid changes expected
- Temperature: active warming; hypothermia increases wound complications and delays recovery
Analgesia and PONV
- Analgesia: multimodal, opioid-sparing; consider local infiltration + TAP block; avoid long-acting opioids where possible in OSA/OHS
- PCA: if used, avoid background infusion in OSA; ensure monitoring (SpO2 ± capnography) and clear escalation plan
- PONV: high risk (laparoscopy, opioids, female, non-smoker); use multimodal prophylaxis (e.g., dexamethasone + ondansetron ± droperidol) and minimise volatile/opioids
Postoperative care and complications
- Respiratory: high risk of hypoventilation, obstruction, atelectasis; nurse head-up; early CPAP/NIV if indicated; encourage incentive spirometry and mobilisation
- VTE: very high risk; ensure mechanical + pharmacological prophylaxis and early mobilisation; consider extended prophylaxis per bariatric protocol
- Surgical complications to recognise: anastomotic/staple line leak (tachycardia, pain, fever, sepsis), bleeding, bowel obstruction/internal hernia, aspiration
- Rhabdomyolysis/pressure injury: prolonged surgery, extreme BMI, poor padding; monitor pain, CK, renal function if suspected
You are asked to anaesthetise a patient with BMI 55 for laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy. What are your main perioperative concerns and how do you plan the case?
Structure: preop risk (OSA/OHS/aspiration/VTE), airway plan, ventilation strategy, drug dosing, analgesia/PONV, postop destination.
- Preop: assess OSA/OHS (STOP-BANG, CPAP use, consider ABG if OHS suspected), reflux/aspiration risk, cardiorespiratory reserve, VTE risk, diabetes control
- Preparation: bariatric table/transfer plan, ramping aids, ultrasound for IV access, difficult airway kit + videolaryngoscope, neuromuscular monitor, warming
- Airway: head-up preoxygenation with CPAP/pressure support; plan modified RSI if aspiration risk; ETT; extubate awake head-up; consider extubation to CPAP
- Ventilation: TV based on IBW, moderate PEEP, recruitment as needed, adjust RR for CO2 from pneumoperitoneum; consider ABG if CO2 retention risk
- Analgesia/PONV: multimodal opioid-sparing (paracetamol ± NSAID, local/TAP, low-dose ketamine/dexmedetomidine), aggressive PONV prophylaxis
- Postop: enhanced monitoring, early mobilisation, VTE prophylaxis, CPAP/NIV, cautious opioids; HDU if OHS/severe OSA/complications
Explain why obese patients desaturate quickly during apnoea and how you reduce this risk at induction.
Core physiology: reduced oxygen reservoir + increased consumption.
- Mechanisms: ↓FRC/ERV (especially supine) → airway closure/atelectasis; ↑O2 consumption and CO2 production; V/Q mismatch
- Reduce risk: head-up/ramped preoxygenation; tight mask seal; CPAP/pressure support; aim EtO2 >0.85–0.90; apnoeic oxygenation; minimise apnoea time with prepared airway plan
Discuss your approach to rapid sequence induction in morbid obesity.
Balance aspiration risk against hypoxia risk; be explicit about modifications.
- Aspiration risk factors: reflux/hiatus hernia, high intra-abdominal pressure, diabetes gastroparesis, emergency surgery
- Technique: ramped/head-up; preoxygenate with CPAP; consider modified RSI with gentle mask ventilation at low pressures if high hypoxia risk; have suction ready
- Drugs: induction agent titrated (often to LBW); suxamethonium to TBW or rocuronium (IBW/LBW dosing) with plan for reversal; ensure full paralysis before laryngoscopy
- Cricoid pressure: correct application; release if it impairs ventilation or view
How do you dose common anaesthetic drugs in morbid obesity? Give examples.
Use TBW/IBW/LBW depending on lipophilicity, Vd, clearance, and effect-site titration.
- Propofol: induction nearer LBW (titrate); maintenance titrate (requirements may be higher than non-obese)
- Suxamethonium: TBW; Rocuronium: IBW/LBW (avoid prolonged block); always use quantitative neuromuscular monitoring
- Opioids: fentanyl/alfentanil to LBW and titrate; remifentanil effect-site models generally use IBW/LBW (avoid TBW dosing)
- Sugammadex: dose to TBW per depth of block (2/4/16 mg/kg); ensure availability
What is obesity hypoventilation syndrome (OHS) and why does it matter perioperatively?
Definition + perioperative implications.
- Definition: BMI ≥30 with awake daytime hypercapnia (PaCO2 >6.0 kPa) after excluding other causes; often coexists with OSA
- Why it matters: pulmonary hypertension/RHF risk, difficult ventilation, high sensitivity to sedatives/opioids, postoperative hypoventilation and CO2 retention
- Management: preop ABG/echo if indicated; minimise opioids; consider arterial line/ABGs; extubate to NIV/CPAP; plan HDU/ICU if severe
Describe your ventilation strategy for laparoscopic bariatric surgery in a patient with BMI 60.
Aim: oxygenation and CO2 control with lung protection and haemodynamic stability.
- Tidal volume based on IBW/predicted body weight; use pressure-controlled or volume-controlled with attention to plateau pressures
- Apply moderate PEEP; recruitment manoeuvres if desaturation/atelectasis; reassess after pneumoperitoneum and position changes
- Increase RR to manage CO2 load; accept permissive hypercapnia only with caution (especially in OHS/pulmonary HTN); consider ABG
- Reverse Trendelenburg helps oxygenation; ensure secure positioning and padding
Outline a safe extubation plan for a morbidly obese patient with known OSA on CPAP.
Extubation is a high-risk phase; plan to prevent obstruction and hypoventilation.
- Prerequisites: normothermia, full reversal with quantitative monitoring, adequate analgesia with minimal opioids, haemodynamic stability, good spontaneous ventilation
- Technique: extubate awake in head-up position; suction; consider airway adjuncts; immediate CPAP application (patient’s own machine if possible)
- Post-extubation: close monitoring in PACU (SpO2, respiratory rate, consider capnography); low threshold for NIV/ICU if recurrent obstruction/hypercapnia
What are the key postoperative complications after bariatric surgery that an anaesthetist should recognise early?
Think respiratory, thrombotic, and surgical catastrophe (leak/bleed).
- Respiratory: obstruction, hypoventilation (OSA/OHS), atelectasis, aspiration
- VTE/PE: high baseline risk; tachycardia, hypoxia, pleuritic pain; ensure prophylaxis and early mobilisation
- Staple/anastomotic leak: persistent tachycardia, fever, abdominal pain, shoulder tip pain, sepsis; urgent surgical review and imaging
- Bleeding: tachycardia, hypotension, falling Hb, increased drain output (if present)
- Rhabdomyolysis/AKI: severe muscle pain, dark urine, rising CK/creatinine; treat early
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