Abstract

Background. Pure oxygen ventilation during anaesthesia is debatable, as it may lead to development of atelectasis. Rationale of the study was to demonstrate the harmlessness of ventilation with pure oxygen.Methods. This is a single-centre, one-department observational trial. Prospectively collected routine-data of 76,784 patients undergoing general, gynaecological, orthopaedic, and vascular surgery during 1995–2009 were retrospectively analysed. Postoperative hypoxia, unplanned ICU-admission, surgical site infection (SSI), postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV), and hospital mortality were continuously recorded. During 1996 the anaesthetic ventilation for all patients was changed from 30% oxygen plus 70% nitrous oxide to 100% oxygen in low-flow mode. Therefore, in order to minimize the potential of confounding due to a variety of treatments being used, we directly compared years 1995 (30% oxygen) and 1997 (100%), whereas the period 1998 to 2009 is simply described.Results. Comparing 1995 to 1997 pure oxygen ventilation led to a decreased incidence of postoperative hypoxic events (4.3 to 3.0%; p < 0.0001) and hospital mortality (2.1 to 1.6%; p = 0.088) as well as SSI (8.0 to 5.0%; p < 0.0001) and PONV (21.6 to 17.5%; p < 0.0001). There was no effect on unplanned ICU-admission (1.1 to 0.9; p = 0.18).Conclusions. The observed effects may be partly due to pure oxygen ventilation, abandonment of nitrous oxide, and application of low-flow anesthesia. Pure oxygen ventilation during general anaesthesia is harmless, as long as certain standards are adhered to. It makes anaesthesia simpler and safer and may reduce clinical morbidity, such as postoperative hypoxia and surgical site infection.

Highlights

  • Abandoning nitrous oxide for general anaesthesia enables the risk-free performance of low flow anaesthesia (Baum & Aitkenhead, 1995), and as a consequence the oxygen fraction during anaesthetic ventilation (FiO2) is an increasingly debated issue (Baum et al, 2004)

  • Applying consequent low flow ventilation has been the key reason for the paradigm change of our department as described in this study; abandoning nitrous oxide was a by-product of this strategy

  • Study questions: First, does pure oxygen ventilation affect the incidence of clinically relevant postoperative respiratory problems and unplanned admission to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU)? does pure oxygen ventilation decrease surgical site infection (SSI) and does it influence postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV); is there an effect on hospital mortality?

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Summary

Introduction

Abandoning nitrous oxide for general anaesthesia enables the risk-free performance of low flow anaesthesia (Baum & Aitkenhead, 1995), and as a consequence the oxygen fraction during anaesthetic ventilation (FiO2) is an increasingly debated issue (Baum et al, 2004). Applying consequent low flow ventilation has been the key reason for the paradigm change of our department as described in this study; abandoning nitrous oxide was a by-product of this strategy. During 1996 the anaesthetic ventilation for all patients was changed from 30% oxygen plus 70% nitrous oxide to 100% oxygen in low-flow mode. The observed effects may be partly due to pure oxygen ventilation, abandonment of nitrous oxide, and application of low-flow anesthesia. Pure oxygen ventilation during general anaesthesia is harmless, as long as certain standards are adhered to. It makes anaesthesia simpler and safer and may reduce clinical morbidity, such as postoperative hypoxia and surgical site infection

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