Abstract

Prolonged times to tracheal extubation are intervals from the end ofsurgery to extubation ≥15 minutes. We examined why there are associations with the end-tidal inhalational agent concentration as a proportion of the age‑adjusted minimum alveolar concentration (MAC fraction) at the end of surgery. The retrospective cohort study used 11.7 years of data from one hospital. All p‑values were adjusted for multiple comparisons. There was a greater odds ofprolonged time to extubation if the anesthesia practitioner was a trainee (odds ratio 1.68) or had finished fewer than five cases with the surgeon during the preceding three years (odds ratio 1.12) (both P<0.0001). There was a greater risk of prolonged time to extubation if the MAC fraction was >0.4 at the end of surgery (odds ratio 2.66, P<0.0001). Anesthesia practitioners who were trainees and all practitioners who had finished fewer than five cases with the surgeon had greater mean MAC fractions atthe end of surgery and had greater relative risks of the MAC fraction >0.4 at the end of surgery (all P<0.0001). The source for greater MAC fractions at the end of surgery was not greater MAC fractions throughout the anesthetic because the means during the case did not differ among groups. Rather, there was substantial variability ofMAC fractions at the end of surgery among cases ofthe same anesthesia practitioner, with the mean (standard deviation) among practitioners of each practitioner's standard deviation being 0.35 (0.05) and the coefficient ofvariation being 71% (13%). More prolonged extubations were associated with greater MAC fractions at the end ofsurgery. The cause of the large MAC fractions was the substantial variability of MAC fractions among cases of each practitioner at the end ofsurgery. That variability matches what was expected from earlier studies, both from variability among practitioners in their goals for the MAC fraction given at the start ofsurgical closure and from inadequate dynamic forecasting of the timing of when surgery would end. Future studies should examine how best to reduce prolonged extubations by using anesthesia machines' display of MAC fraction and feedback control of end-tidal agent concentration.

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