Abstract

With increasing life expectancy and improved surgical technology an ever-larger number of elderly patients with cardiovascular disease, or significant cardiovascular risk factors will undergo major surgery. More than 5% of an unselected surgical population undergoing non-cardiac surgery will suffer from perioperative cardiovascular complications including myocardial infarction and cardiac death. The incidence of adverse cardiac events may even reach 30% in high-risk patients undergoing vascular surgery causing a substantial financial burden of perioperative health care costs. 59 Thus, all therapeutic measures should be undertaken to reach the challenging goal of a lower incidence of perioperative cardiovascular complications. Gaining control over sympathetic nervous system activity, that is blunting the adrenergic response to the surgical trauma, traditionally represents an important aspect of anaesthetic practice. 21 Anaesthesiology has been regarded as the ‘practice of autonomic nervous system medicine’. While variable and moderate changes in sympathetic nervous system activity function as a servo-control mechanism and are even required to maintain and optimize cardiac performance, undue liberation of excitotoxic substances such as catecholamines and inflammatory cytokines, particularly during emergence from anaesthesia and the painful postoperative period, facilitates the occurrence of cardiovascular complications. 83 84 At this point, the life-supporting adrenergic drive (‘fight-or-flight-response’) turns into a potentially hazardous life-threatening maladaptation. In support of this concept, the beneficial effects of antiadrenergic treatment regimens in perioperative medicine have been confirmed, in observational studies, metaanalyses 55 1 66 and randomized controlled clinical trials. 43 54 59 63 80 84 However, the seemingly established concept of ‘sympatholysis’ as an effective cardioprotective treatment modality needs considerable refinement in the light of the many new experimental and clinical findings. The parlance of ‘sympatholytic’ protection erroneously equates annihilation of any type of adrenergic stimulation with cardioprotection and should be replaced by ‘sympathomodulatory’protection. The present review summarizes findings from large-scale heart failure trials and discusses basic and clinical aspects of individual sympatho-modulatory therapies, as currently used in perioperative medicine, including b-adrenergic antagonism, a2-agonism, and regional anaesthetic techniques. For limitation of space, reviews will often be cited where further references to the primary literature may be found.

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