Awareness during anaesthesia
Jonathan G Hardman BMedSci (Hons) BM BS DM FANZCA FRCA CCST (Anaes) MEWI, Associate
Professor (Reader) in Anaesthesia & Consultant Anaesthetist, University
Department of Anaesthesia, University Hospital, Nottingham NG7 2UH
Tel:
0115 823 1002; Fax: 0115 970 0739; Email: j.hardman@nottingham.ac.uk
Summary
Intra-operative awareness is traumatic for patients
and is associated with post-operative psychological sequelae. Litigation
frequently follows. Awareness occurs during approximately 0.03% of general
anaesthetics and is much more likely when muscle relaxants (paralysing drugs)
are used. The most common cause of awareness is administration of inadequate
anaesthetic agent. Physical signs of awareness include increased heart rate and
blood pressure, sweating, tear formation and movement during surgery; these may
be masked by drugs or co-existing pathology. Certain situations are “high-risk”
with respect to awareness; these include Caesarean section, emergency surgery
and major blood loss.
Introduction
Perception of the environment and the formation of
memories during anaesthesia is termed awareness. It is a relatively common
complication and may be extremely distressing for patients, particularly if pain
is recalled. Recall that is spontaneous or easily provoked is termed explicit,
while recall that is not consciously perceived (but may affect behaviour or
mood at a later time) is termed implicit. Awareness of painful surgery
while paralysed is usually distressing and life-altering, while awareness of
movement or conversations during anaesthesia may have milder sequelae. Psychological
consequences include insomnia, depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress
disorder with distressing flashbacks and alteration in personality. The majority
of patients who have experienced intra-operative awareness fear future
anaesthesia and surgery. Consequences for the anaesthetist are common;
litigation follows frequently, and the majority of claims are successful, with
an inadequate standard of care being indicated.
Historically,
awareness had an incidence of awareness of up to 7%. However, in recent times estimates
of the incidence of awareness with explicit recall are typically 0.03% of
general anaesthetics (1 in 3000). Painless awareness is around 10 times more
common than awareness that includes pain. Such painful awareness is at least
twice as likely when neuromuscular blocking (paralysing) drugs are used.
Light anaesthesia (i.e. the use of smaller doses of
anaesthetic agents) is associated with a greater risk of awareness. Poor
anaesthetic technique is frequently to blame, and errors include omission or
late commencement of anaesthetic agent, inadequate dosing or failure to
recognise the physical signs of awareness. Under-dosing of anaesthetic agent often
occurs during attempts to correct a reduced blood pressure. Various types of
surgery are associated with increased risk of awareness: cardiac surgery,
emergency surgery, surgery associated with substantial blood loss and Caesarean
section.
The selection of anaesthetic dose is based upon the
patient’s expected requirement. Requirements vary by around 10-20% for a given
age group, and by up to 50% from the very young to the very old (with elderly
patients requiring less to cause unconsciousness). Variability is probably
greater with intravenous than inhaled anaesthetic agents, and it seems likely
that awareness is more likely using intravenous anaesthetic techniques.
Resistance to anaesthetic agents is, in general,
rare. Pyrexia, hyperthyroidism, obesity, anxiety, tobacco smoking, heavy
alcohol use, use of recreational drugs (e.g. opioids, amphetamines, cocaine),
chronic use of sedatives (e.g. temazepam) and prior and repeated exposure to
anaesthetic agents may incur some increase in dose requirements, but the
evidence is patchy. Conversely, pregnancy, hypothyroidism, hypothermia,
hypotension and old age reduce dose requirements.
Equipment malfunction has been
associated with awareness. Such failures include empty vaporisers (which are
used to deliver inhaled anaesthetic drugs), impurities in inhaled agents and
disconnection from the anaesthetic machine. Blockage of intravenous infusion
pumps or failure of the intravenous cannula (the ‘drip’) risk awareness during
intravenous anaesthesia.
The physical signs of awareness are generated through
sympathetic nervous system activation; they include: movement during surgery, sweating,
increased heart rate and blood pressure, tear formation and pupillary dilatation
and reactivity to light. Awareness during anaesthesia may be detected through
the use of specialised monitoring such as bispectral index (BIS). The clinical
signs of awareness may be masked by some disease states and concurrent
medications. These include hypothyroidism, hypothermia and beta blockade.
If intra-operative signs suggest that a patient is experiencing
awareness then anaesthesia should be deepened immediately. Administration of a
benzodiazepine (e.g. midazolam) may reduce further recall, but does not protect
against events already experienced. If a patient complains post-operatively of
intra-operative awareness, the anaesthetist should establish the timing of the
episode and distinguish between dreaming and awareness. Recalled events (e.g.
conversations or pain) should be noted in the medical records. This information
will be of great importance and usefulness should litigation follow.
All recall is not necessarily awareness. Fraudulent
claims of awareness do occur; such claims often include unrealistically vivid
recall of entire operations. Patients may occasionally confuse awareness with memories
of events prior to or immediately after anaesthesia, and such confusion is best
determined by careful and sensitive questioning. However, the vast majority of
claims of awareness have been genuine and denial of the patient’s claim may
worsen their psychological outcome. Referral to a psychologist / psychiatrist
should be made if the patient is suffering low mood, anxiety, sleep disturbance
or flashbacks.
Sedative premedication reduces the incidence of
awareness, but is not considered a minimum standard of care because of the
potential adverse effects of such premedication. Adjusting the dose of
anaesthetic agents for each patient reduces the risk of awareness and of
side-effects of anaesthetic agents. Due to the increase in the risk of
awareness caused by the use of muscle relaxants, they should be used only when
necessary (e.g. where a tracheal tube is required or muscle relaxation is
needed to facilitate surgical access). In high-risk situations (e.g. Caesarean
section, cardiac surgery, concurrent beta blockers) the use of a monitor of
depth of anaesthesia (e.g. BIS) is justified, but is not considered, currently,
to be mandatory.
It is important to note that awareness may occur (rarely)
despite excellent care. Successful defence against litigation requires thorough
medical records that include the timing and dose of anaesthetic agents.