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العنوان
Perioperative Anesthetic Management of Diabetic Children in Emergency Conditions/
المؤلف
Abdel Rahman,MennatAlla Ahmed Fouad
هيئة الاعداد
باحث / منة الله أحمد فؤاد عبد الرحمن
مشرف / شريف فاروق إبراهيم الشنتورى
مشرف / هبه بهاء الدين السروى
مشرف / هبة فؤاد عبد العزيز طولان
تاريخ النشر
2017
عدد الصفحات
87.p:
اللغة
الإنجليزية
الدرجة
ماجستير
التخصص
التخدير و علاج الألم
تاريخ الإجازة
12/1/2017
مكان الإجازة
جامعة عين شمس - كلية الطب - Anesthesiology
الفهرس
Only 14 pages are availabe for public view

from 87

from 87

Abstract

Pediatric patients with diabetes are managed with increasingly complex regimens that have direct implications for their perioperative care. In addition to recognizing the relevant differences among diabetes treatment regimens, pediatric anesthesiologists must also consider a child’s metabolic control, age, size, pubertal development, the intended surgical procedure, and its length when devising a perioperative plan.
As diabetes treatment options for children continue to change, such algorithms will need to be updated. Formal assessment of the impact of such algorithms on clinical outcomes, satisfaction with care, and cost of care would provide additional insight into their revision.
Emergencies in pediatric diabetic patients could be; medical, that include hypoglycemia or hyperglycemia and DKA or surgical, that include victims of polytrauma and supracondylar fractures, airway foreign bodies, post tonsillectomy bleeding or pyloric stenosis.
New guidelines has been postulated for the management of diabetic patients throughout surgical interference as tight glycemic control in diabetic patients undergoing major surgery wether elective or emergency has been shown to improve perioperative morbidity and mortality rates.
However, this aggressive strategy requires frequent monitoring of blood glucose concentrations as surgery induces a considerable stress response mediated by the neuroendocrine system through the release of catecholamines, glucagon and cortisol which results in peripheral insulin resistance, increased hepatic glucose production, impaired insulin secretion, fat and protein breakdown and potential hyperglycemia and even ketosis in some cases.
The regimen selected to manage diabetics undergoing surgery has become standardized in most facilities in recent years with a target glucose and maintenance in the range of 80-110 mg/dl but still the key to success of any regimen is careful frequent monitoring to detect any alterations in metabolic control and correct them before they become severe.
Although the mechanism by which to achieve optimal diabetes control in the perioperative period may still be debated, recognition that hyperglycemia may have deleterious short-term as well as long-term consequences highlights the importance of consistently aiming for this goal in the perioperative period just as in the outpatient setting.