Anaesthetists Receive New Guidance On Managing Potentially Fatal Anaphylactic Reactions During Surgery

Anaesthetists in the UK and Ireland have been issued with new guidelines on how to prevent and handle involving the small, but growing, number of people who have a severe and potentially during .

“Although anaesthetic is still relatively rare, we have noticed a rise in the number of patients being referred to specialist after an during surgery” says Harper, one of the country’s leading experts on and and Chair of the working party set up by the of and Ireland (AAGBI). “We believe that this may be due to more patients having a severe reaction to

“All anaesthetists are trained to deal with , which can trigger dangerously low blood pressure and may cause severe , but most anaesthetists will only see a small number of cases during their career. That is why it is so important to keep them up-to-date with the latest information on diagnosis and treatment and provide emergency guidance for use in .”

Studies from France and Australia indicate that the incidence of life-threatening during is between one in 10,000 to 20,000 patients. This suggests that there could be approximately 500 severe reactions in the UK each year and that they are more common when drugs are administered intravenously.

However, when the working party looked at the UK figures, they found that only 361 reactions had been reported to the UK over six years and ten per cent of these were fatal. This compared with 789 incidents in France over a two-year period, which has a comparable population and a well-established culture of reporting -related reactions.

“It is important to interpret the UK data with because it is likely that less-severe reactions are not reported and the could be much higher” stresses . “The situation in the UK is similar to other countries, where the true incidence of death and illness relating from such incidents remains poorly defined and the accuracy and completeness of reporting is not as good as it could be.”

Commenting on the launch of the new patient safety guidelines – “Suspected Anaphylactic Reactions Associated with ” – suggests that having operations under local rather than general may reduce the risk of some patients having an allergy-related reaction.

“It is estimated that approximately 60 per cent of adverse reactions are associated with muscle relaxant drugs, which are only administered when a patient is under a general anaesthetic” he explains.

A research review carried out by the AAGBI working group also found that:

- Reactions to neuromuscular blocking agents and the latex gloves worn by surgical staff are more common in female patients.

- Antibiotic is more common in smokers, possibly because of increased exposure to repeated courses of for respiratory tract infections.

- Patients with a history of allergic skin diseases, asthma and food allergies appear to face a greater risk from latex, but not from neuromuscular drugs or .

- Individuals who have asthma or take beta-blocking drugs may suffer a more severe reaction.

- People who suffer allergies to common environmental chemicals in toothpastes, washing detergents, shampoos and cough medicine may be more sensitive to neuromuscular blocking agents.

- Reactions to local anaesthetics are very uncommon.

“Patients who have concerns about a possible allergy to should talk to the anaesthetist before they undergo their procedure” says . “And any patients who are affected should be investigated by specialist .”

The AAGBI states that it is widely recognised that more specialist allergy services need to be made available so that patients don’t have to travel long distances or face delays, especially when they are waiting for surgery. The expansion of these services will need extra Department of Health funding.

The detailed guidelines – which are available on http://www.aagbi.org- are being supported by an A4 laminate, which is designed to be kept in so it can be readily available in an emergency. This covers initial management and drug advice, secondary management, investigation and later investigations to discover what caused the reaction. There is also a YouTube video, in which is interviewed by Dr William Harrop- Griffiths of the AAGBI. This can be accessed by putting AAGBI into the YouTube search box.

Anaesthetists are specialist doctors involved in the care of two-thirds of all hospital patients. Their expertise extends beyond the main operating theatre to acute and chronic pain management, leading resuscitation teams, managing Intensive Care Units, working in maternity units, accident and emergency departments and radiology, the care of some dental patients and the transfer of critically ill patients.

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of and Ireland

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