Roux-en-Y gastric bypass
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Revision as of 12:09, 17 May 2021 by Jessica Leung (talk | contribs) (started the page. Added patient evaluation. Edited pre-operative and intraoperative management.)
Roux-en-Y gastric bypass
Anesthesia type |
General |
---|---|
Airway |
ETT |
Lines and access |
PIV OG tube |
Monitors |
Standard, nasal temp |
Primary anesthetic considerations | |
Preoperative |
Potential difficult airway and ventilation |
Intraoperative |
Rapid sequence, ramped position |
Postoperative |
PONV, IV tylenol |
Article quality | |
Editor rating | |
User likes | 0 |
A procedural variant for gastric partitioning for morbid obesity where the stomach is partitioned into a proximal and distal pouch with an anastamosis to the jejunum to drain the proximal pouch.
Preoperative management
Patient evaluation
System | Considerations |
---|---|
Neurologic | |
Cardiovascular | Evaluate for hypertension
OSA causing pulmonary arterial hypertension |
Respiratory | Evaluate BMI for decreased FRC
Evaluate OSA status for difficult mask ventilation |
Gastrointestinal | Consider delayed gastric emptying with diabetes mellitus |
Hematologic | |
Renal | |
Endocrine | Consider delayed gastric emptying with diabetes mellitus |
Other |
Labs and studies
- Sleep study (AHI score if available) for OSA
Operating room setup
- Consider ramp for airway management
- Consider video laryngoscopy
- OG tube
Patient preparation and premedication
- Minimize perioperative sedation
Regional and neuraxial techniques
Intraoperative management
Monitoring and access
- Standard ASA monitors
Induction and airway management
- Consider rapid sequence induction
- Video laryngoscopy can be helpful for anticipated difficult airways
Positioning
- Supine
- Extreme reverse Trendelenburg (place baseboard by feet)
Maintenance and surgical considerations
- OG tube is advanced through the surgical anastamosis to prevent backwall suturing of anastamosis
- Surgical and anesthesia communication and coordination is important to guide OGT through anastamosis
Emergence
Postoperative management
Disposition
- PACU
Pain management
- Moderate pain: IV and oral narcotics
Potential complications
- Bleeding
- Thromboemobolic events
- Aspiration
- Backwall suture of anastamosis
Procedure variants
Variant 1 | Variant 2 | |
---|---|---|
Unique considerations | ||
Position | ||
Surgical time | ||
EBL | ||
Postoperative disposition | ||
Pain management | ||
Potential complications |
References
Top contributors: Jessica Leung, Nirav Kamdar and Chris Rishel