Patient Awareness during Anaesthesia: An Analysis of 2000 Incident Reports
Author(s) -
G. A. Osborne,
R. K. Webb,
W. B. Runciman
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
anaesthesia and intensive care
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.494
H-Index - 62
eISSN - 1448-0271
pISSN - 0310-057X
DOI - 10.1177/0310057x9302100528
Subject(s) - medicine , anesthesia , regional anaesthesia , intraoperative awareness , anesthesiology , medical emergency , propofol
Amongst the first 2000 incidents reported to the Australian Incident Monitoring Study were 16 cases in which patient recall of perioperative events was consistent with awareness. Awareness that occurred in 3 of 10 cases during anaesthesia was attributed to low concentrations of volatile anaesthetic agent; the conduct of anaesthesia appeared to be unremarkable in the other 7. The remaining 6 cases involved the inadvertent paralysis of patients prior to induction of anaesthesia, most commonly by "syringe swap" when suxamethonium was given instead of fentanyl. Some of these patients were significantly distressed. These preliminary findings suggest that incident monitoring should be useful in the study of awareness associated with anaesthesia and the development of strategies to prevent it.
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