By Peter J. Papadakos, MD, FCCM, FCCP, FAARC, FNIV
Professor of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine,
Surgery, Neurology, and Neurosurgery
Director of Critical Care Medicine
University of Rochester Medical Center
Rochester, N.Y.
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) affects 20% of U.S. adults, of whom about 90% are undiagnosed. The major risk factors for OSA include obesity, male sex and a family history of OSA. There is a large body of literature showing that OSA is an independent risk factor for hypertension, heart disease, type 2 diabetes and stroke. This case illustrates how a patient presented for elective admission for surgery and suffered a stroke.
A 55-year-old man with obesity presented for elective surgery for a chronic nonhealing ankle fracture. The patient reported a long history of loud snoring and type 2 diabetes. He was administered a general anesthetic and had no issues during the case. The patient recovered and was admitted to the hospital overnight, and it was noted that he had marked bouts of hypertension overnight while sleeping; the patient had no past history of hypertension. The staff also noted evidence of sleep apnea patterns of sleep and snoring. The patient was then discharged home. Three weeks later, the patient presented with a large embolic stroke and was admitted to the neuro-ICU. He was discharged to a rehabilitation facility with marked cognitive issues.
This case illustrates how important it is for anesthesia providers to screen patients for OSA and educate patients about the major risks of OSA. There were also some key incidents during this admission that support the need for staff education. The episodes of hypertension during sleep and not while awake are a key sign of the cyclic sympathetic outflow that occurs during OSA. This also supports cyclic release of mediators that occurs during severe OSA that can affect the endothelium and cause activation of coagulation cascade. The snoring can also cause direct vibratory trauma to the carotid blood vessels, and also cause endothelium damage on the interior of those vessels that can generate a clot.
We as anesthesia providers should be at the forefront of identification of OSA and have a protocol to educate patients and refer them to sleep specialists for testing and proper treatment. This can be a major public health contribution of our specialty.
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Thank you for this article. What amazes me are the amount of patients I see with afib that go through a cardiology work up and no one mentions the obvious red flags for OSA. I see this every day.
Excellent reminder about this growing problem. We should certainly be incorporating questionnaires into our preop assessments and acting on the results
ASA Task Force strong recommendations are for the anesthesiologist to perform a preop patient and family interview either the day before surgery or the day of surgery regarding the presence of obstructive sleep apnea. This can inform the anesthesiologist regarding perioperative care, particularly in the post anesthesia care unit, as it pertains to patient elevation, post-surgical pain management plan, and patient history with pain medications, particularly opioids. Opioid narcotics for patients with obstructive sleep apnea should be avoided, and these patients should be elevated. Opioid pain medications will reduce the tonicity of the parapharyngeal muscles, and supine position can promote closure of the airway. If opioids for postop pain are considered absolutely unavoidable for a particular case, as most anesthesiologists believe they are, then diligent observation of vital signs and direct observation of patient respiration is absolutely essential by the critical care nurse in the PACU. This nurse should be given explicit handoff instructions by the anesthesiologist regarding the issues pertaining to OSA and postop care/medications while in the PACU.
Also
Atrial Natriuretic peptide secretion causes severe nocturia.(Which actually is somewhat helped byCPAP)
OSA decreases lifespan 12-15 yrs.!
CPAP also gives a patient a false sense of security that it works 100%. Some in fact get minimal benefit.
Weight loss via surgery or new meds should be encouraged since diets and exercise are rarely followed religiously.
I expected this Professor of Anesthesiology to mention the patient’s heart rhythm.
A Fib now appears to be the intermediate step between OSA and embolic stroke.