The Thai anesthesia incident monitoring study (Thai AIMS) of postoperative central neurological complications

Objective: To analyze the incidents of central neurological complication in the Thai Anesthesia Incident Monitoring Study (Thai AIMS). Material and Method: A prospective descriptive multi-centered study of incident reports was conducted in 51 hospitals across Thailand from January to June 2007. Volu...

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Main Authors: Toomtong P., Sriprajittichai P., Charuluxananan S., Suratsunya T., Lapisatepun W.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2014
Online Access:http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-59649094581&partnerID=40&md5=67979912627face82624cbf7d10c8d55
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/2922
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Institution: Chiang Mai University
Language: English
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-29222014-08-30T02:25:33Z The Thai anesthesia incident monitoring study (Thai AIMS) of postoperative central neurological complications Toomtong P. Sriprajittichai P. Charuluxananan S. Suratsunya T. Lapisatepun W. Objective: To analyze the incidents of central neurological complication in the Thai Anesthesia Incident Monitoring Study (Thai AIMS). Material and Method: A prospective descriptive multi-centered study of incident reports was conducted in 51 hospitals across Thailand from January to June 2007. Voluntary and anonymous reports of any adverse events during the first 24 hrs of anesthesia were sent to the Thai AIMS data management unit. Three anesthesiologists reviewed the possible central neurological complication reports. Descriptive statistics was used. Results: There were 16 relevant incident reports of central neurological complications (7 cases of convulsion, 5 cases of cerebro-vascular accident and 4 cases of coma). Majority of patients appeared to be old with underlying co-morbidities undergoing major surgical procedures under general anesthesia and required more intensive intra-operative monitoring. These complications occurred commonly with patients of orthopedics, cardiac, urologic and neurosurgical surgery. The majority of cerebro-vascular accident (80%) and coma (75%) were considered preventable. Conclusion: Inappropriate decision making and inexperienced anesthesiologists were common contributing factors while suggested corrective strategies were quality assurance activity, clinical practice guidelines and improvement of supervision. 2014-08-30T02:25:33Z 2014-08-30T02:25:33Z 2009 Article 01252208 19260240 JMTHB http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-59649094581&partnerID=40&md5=67979912627face82624cbf7d10c8d55 http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/2922 English
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
language English
description Objective: To analyze the incidents of central neurological complication in the Thai Anesthesia Incident Monitoring Study (Thai AIMS). Material and Method: A prospective descriptive multi-centered study of incident reports was conducted in 51 hospitals across Thailand from January to June 2007. Voluntary and anonymous reports of any adverse events during the first 24 hrs of anesthesia were sent to the Thai AIMS data management unit. Three anesthesiologists reviewed the possible central neurological complication reports. Descriptive statistics was used. Results: There were 16 relevant incident reports of central neurological complications (7 cases of convulsion, 5 cases of cerebro-vascular accident and 4 cases of coma). Majority of patients appeared to be old with underlying co-morbidities undergoing major surgical procedures under general anesthesia and required more intensive intra-operative monitoring. These complications occurred commonly with patients of orthopedics, cardiac, urologic and neurosurgical surgery. The majority of cerebro-vascular accident (80%) and coma (75%) were considered preventable. Conclusion: Inappropriate decision making and inexperienced anesthesiologists were common contributing factors while suggested corrective strategies were quality assurance activity, clinical practice guidelines and improvement of supervision.
format Article
author Toomtong P.
Sriprajittichai P.
Charuluxananan S.
Suratsunya T.
Lapisatepun W.
spellingShingle Toomtong P.
Sriprajittichai P.
Charuluxananan S.
Suratsunya T.
Lapisatepun W.
The Thai anesthesia incident monitoring study (Thai AIMS) of postoperative central neurological complications
author_facet Toomtong P.
Sriprajittichai P.
Charuluxananan S.
Suratsunya T.
Lapisatepun W.
author_sort Toomtong P.
title The Thai anesthesia incident monitoring study (Thai AIMS) of postoperative central neurological complications
title_short The Thai anesthesia incident monitoring study (Thai AIMS) of postoperative central neurological complications
title_full The Thai anesthesia incident monitoring study (Thai AIMS) of postoperative central neurological complications
title_fullStr The Thai anesthesia incident monitoring study (Thai AIMS) of postoperative central neurological complications
title_full_unstemmed The Thai anesthesia incident monitoring study (Thai AIMS) of postoperative central neurological complications
title_sort thai anesthesia incident monitoring study (thai aims) of postoperative central neurological complications
publishDate 2014
url http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-59649094581&partnerID=40&md5=67979912627face82624cbf7d10c8d55
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/2922
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