Monday, 22 October 2012

Altitude anaesthesia


While working abroad, at an altitude of 5000m, it becomes necessary to administer a
general anaesthetic with an FiO2 of 0.9, to a healthy patient who lives locally. The
operating theatre is heated and equipped with an anaesthetic machine that uses variable
orifice flowmeters and a Tec5 isoflurane vaporiser, out of circuit. Regarding your anaesthetic
management, the following statements are true EXCEPT for which one?

a) The delivered concentration of isoflurane will be more than that shown on the dial
of the vaporiser
b) The oxygen rotameter will accurately read the delivered flow of oxygen
c) The alveolar concentration of isoflurane will need to be higher than at sea level to
achieve the same degree of anaesthesia
d) The partial pressure of isoflurane in the vaporiser is the same as it would be if you
returned with the same vaporiser to sea level
e) The patients oxygen saturation is more likely to be 90% than 96%


Answer: b

Explanation
In individuals living at altitude a number of compensatory changes occur including
hyperventilation, increased erythropoietin secretion, increased 2,3-diphosphoglycerate,
adaptation of the respiratory centre to a lower PaCO2 and an increase in peripheral
capillaries. At altitude there are a number of issues pertinent to giving an anaesthetic.
The first is that although the FiO2 remains constant at any altitude the PO2 decreases the
higher you go. The sigmoid-shaped oxyhaemoglobin dissociation curve compensates for
this, maintaining haemoglobin saturation in the high nineties up to about 3000m when
the PO2 hits the steep part of the curve and haemoglobin saturation starts to fall. The
position of the oxyhaemoglobin dissociation curve does not shift much as the respiratory
alkalosis shifts it to the left and the hypoxia shifts it to the right. In terms of delivering an
inhalational anaesthetic agent at altitude it is important to remember a few basic
principles. The first is that the saturated vapour pressure of a volatile agent, while
affected by temperature, is unaffected by atmospheric pressure hence at altitude the
partial pressure of the isoflurane in the vaporiser is the same as at sea level. This means
that the delivered concentration (or minimum alveolar concentration (MAC)) of isoflurane
the patient receives will be more than is dialled up due to the drop in atmospheric
pressure (as explained by Daltons law). However, the action of an anaesthetic agent
depends on the effect site concentration, which is determined by the alveolar partial
pressure not the concentration. Although the MAC is up, the effect will be the same so
dialling up the same amount as at sea level will have the same effect. At altitude due to
the reduced atmospheric pressure there are fewer gas or vapour molecules per unit
volume. This means that at a given flow rate dialled up on a rotameter fewer molecules
pass the bobbin per unit time, therefore the bobbin will under-read at altitude due to
fewer molecules hitting the underside of the bobbin per unit time.

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