Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editor biographies
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part I Medical management
- 1 Anesthesia management of the surgical patient
- 2 Nutrition
- 3 Preoperative testing
- 4 Chronic medications around the time of surgery
- 5 Ethical considerations in the surgical patient
- 6 Cardiovascular disease
- 7 Postoperative chest pain and shortness of breath
- 8 Perioperative management of hypertension
- 9 Perioperative pulmonary risk evaluation and management for non-cardiothoracic surgery
- 10 Acute lung injury (ALI) and the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)
- 11 Postoperative pulmonary complications
- 12 Peptic ulcer disease
- 13 Liver disease
- 14 Inflammatory bowel disease
- 15 Postoperative gastrointestinal complications
- 16 Disorders of red cells
- 17 Assessment of bleeding risk in the patient with no history of hemostatic problems
- 18 Surgical issues affecting patients with hemotologic malignancies
- 19 Prophylaxis for deep venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism in surgery
- 20 Blood transfusion/preoperative considerations and complications
- 21 Prevention of surgical site infections
- 22 Medical care of the HIV-infected surgical patient
- 23 Fever and infection in the postoperative setting
- 24 Surgery in the patient with renal disease
- 25 Postoperative electrolyte disorders
- 26 Diabetes mellitus
- 27 Disorders of the thyroid
- 28 Disorders of the adrenal cortex
- 29 Disorders of calcium metabolism
- 30 Pheochromocytoma
- 31 Rheumatologic diseases
- 32 Cerebrovascular disease
- 33 Management of the surgical patient with dementia
- 34 Neuromuscular disorders
- 35 Perioperative management of patients with Parkinson's disease
- 36 Delirium in the surgical patient
- 37 Surgery in the elderly
- 38 Obesity
- 39 Depression
- 40 Substance abuse
- 41 Care of the peripartum patient
- Part II Surgical procedures and their complications
- Index
- References
3 - Preoperative testing
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editor biographies
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part I Medical management
- 1 Anesthesia management of the surgical patient
- 2 Nutrition
- 3 Preoperative testing
- 4 Chronic medications around the time of surgery
- 5 Ethical considerations in the surgical patient
- 6 Cardiovascular disease
- 7 Postoperative chest pain and shortness of breath
- 8 Perioperative management of hypertension
- 9 Perioperative pulmonary risk evaluation and management for non-cardiothoracic surgery
- 10 Acute lung injury (ALI) and the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)
- 11 Postoperative pulmonary complications
- 12 Peptic ulcer disease
- 13 Liver disease
- 14 Inflammatory bowel disease
- 15 Postoperative gastrointestinal complications
- 16 Disorders of red cells
- 17 Assessment of bleeding risk in the patient with no history of hemostatic problems
- 18 Surgical issues affecting patients with hemotologic malignancies
- 19 Prophylaxis for deep venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism in surgery
- 20 Blood transfusion/preoperative considerations and complications
- 21 Prevention of surgical site infections
- 22 Medical care of the HIV-infected surgical patient
- 23 Fever and infection in the postoperative setting
- 24 Surgery in the patient with renal disease
- 25 Postoperative electrolyte disorders
- 26 Diabetes mellitus
- 27 Disorders of the thyroid
- 28 Disorders of the adrenal cortex
- 29 Disorders of calcium metabolism
- 30 Pheochromocytoma
- 31 Rheumatologic diseases
- 32 Cerebrovascular disease
- 33 Management of the surgical patient with dementia
- 34 Neuromuscular disorders
- 35 Perioperative management of patients with Parkinson's disease
- 36 Delirium in the surgical patient
- 37 Surgery in the elderly
- 38 Obesity
- 39 Depression
- 40 Substance abuse
- 41 Care of the peripartum patient
- Part II Surgical procedures and their complications
- Index
- References
Summary
Overview and historical perspective
The goal of preoperative medical evaluation of patients should be reduction of intraoperative and perioperative morbidity and mortality. A review of the literature suggests this is best acccomplished by a meticulous preoperative history and physical exam. The data gleaned from the history and physical, combined with information about the planned procedure, form the basis for selection of medically indicated preoperative tests.
Routine preoperative testing for all patients, rather than indicated testing for selected patients, came into vogue with the advent of multiphasic screening in the 1960s. The alluring notion that routine testing would lead to the discovery and treatment of unsuspected abnormalities, thereby decreasing perioperative complications, has not been realized. Large-scale routine testing leads to the discovery of numerous minor abnormalities, usually of no importance to surgical care. Further evaluation of these abnormal values may incur additional cost, potential harm to patients from more invasive investigations, and often unnecessary surgical delays.
During the 1970s and 1980s, multiple investigators focused attention on the usefulness and cost-effectiveness of screening laboratory tests. In a landmark article in 1985, Kaplan et al. assessed the value of routine laboratory screening of preoperative patients. He and coworkers studied a random sample of 2000 patients who underwent tests before elective surgery in an academic medical center. They set criteria for test indications and “action limits” for test results.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Medical Management of the Surgical PatientA Textbook of Perioperative Medicine, pp. 32 - 39Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006
References
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