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Article
Development of a safe and pragmatic awake craniotomy program at Maine Medical Center.
Journal of neurosurgical anesthesiology
  • Anand I Rughani
  • Theodor Rintel
  • Rajiv Desai, Maine Medical Center
  • Deborah A Cushing, Maine Medical Center
  • Jeffrey E Florman, Maine Medical Center
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2011
Institution/Department
Neurology and Neuroscience
MeSH Headings
Adult, Aged, Airway Management, Anesthesia, Intravenous, Anesthetics, Brain Mapping, Brain Neoplasms, Craniotomy, Female, Humans, Hypnotics and Sedatives, Intraoperative Complications, Male, Middle Aged, Monitoring, Intraoperative, Neurosurgical Procedures, Patient Selection, Preoperative Care, Retrospective Studies, Seizures, Treatment Outcome, Wakefulness
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Awake craniotomy offers an excellent means of performing intraoperative mapping and optimizing surgical resection of brain tumors. Awake craniotomy relies on a strong collaboration between anesthesiologists, neurosurgeons, and operating room staff. The authors recently introduced awake craniotomy for tumor resection at the Maine Medical Center and propose that it can be performed safely, effectively, and efficiently in a high-volume community hospital.

METHODS: We describe a practical approach to performing awake craniotomy involving streamlined anesthetic protocols and simplified intraoperative testing parameters in a carefully selected group of patients. Our first 25 patients are retrospectively reviewed with particular attention to the anesthetic protocol, the extent of resection, the operative time, post-operative complications, the length of hospitalization, and their functional status at follow-up.

RESULTS: The authors established an anesthetic protocol based primarily on midazolam, fentanyl, propofol, and local anesthetic. The authors note that all but one patient was able to tolerate the awake procedure. Gross total resection was achieved in nearly 80% of patients with a glial tumor. Operative time was short, averaging 159 minutes of entire anesthesia care. Length of stay averaged 3.7 days. Persistent new post-operative deficits were noted in 2 of 25 patients. There was no substantial difference in total hospital charges for patients undergoing awake craniotomy when compared to a matched historical control.

CONCLUSIONS: With attention focused on patient selection and a streamlined anesthetic protocol, the authors were able to successfully implement an awake craniotomy protocol in a community setting with satisfying results, including low operative morbidity, short operative times, low anesthetic complications, and excellent patient tolerance.

Citation Information
Anand I Rughani, Theodor Rintel, Rajiv Desai, Deborah A Cushing, et al.. "Development of a safe and pragmatic awake craniotomy program at Maine Medical Center." Journal of neurosurgical anesthesiology Vol. 23 Iss. 1 (2011) p. 18 - 24 ISSN: 1537-1921
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/anand-rughani/10/