학술논문

Intraoperative management of brain-dead organ donors by anesthesiologists during an organ procurement procedure: results from a French survey
Document Type
article
Source
BMC Anesthesiology. 19(1)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Anesthesia
Anesthesiologists
Brain Death
Clinical Competence
France
Health Care Surveys
Health Knowledge
Attitudes
Practice
Humans
Tissue and Organ Procurement
Brain-dead donors
Organ procurement
Survey
SFAR research network
Medical Physiology
Anesthesiology
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundThis study aimed at describing usual anesthetic practices for brain-dead donors (BDD) during an organ procurement (OP) procedure and to assess the knowledge and self-confidence of French anesthesiologists with this practice.MethodsAn electronic and anonymous survey with closed-questions about anesthetic management of BDD was distributed to French anesthesiologists via the mailing list of the French Society of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine.ResultsFour hundred fifty-eight responses were analyzed. Respondents were mainly attending physicians with more than 10 years of clinical experience. 78% of them declared being cognizant of guidelines regarding management of BDD. Advanced hemodynamic monitoring and endocrine substitution were rarely considered by respondents (31 and 35% of respondents, respectively). 98% of the respondents used crystalloids for fluid resuscitation. During the procedure, use of neuromuscular blockers, opioids and sedative agents were considered by respectively 84, 61 and 27% of the respondents. A very high level of agreement (10 [8-10], on a ten-points Likert-style scale) was reported concerning the expected impact of intraoperative anesthetic management on the primary function of grafts.ConclusionsDeclared anesthetic practice appeared in accordance with guidelines concerning organ donor management in the ICU. Further studies are needed to evaluate the specific impact of intraoperative management during this procedure and thus the need for specific anesthetic guidelines.