COVID-19大流行期间的神经外科实践

G. Sharifi, N. Kalani, A. Kazemi, A. Kazeminezhad
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摘要

背景与目的:严重急性呼吸窘迫综合征冠状病毒2 (SARS-CoV-2)病毒原是新型冠状病毒病2019 (COVID-19)的病原。它于2019年12月在中国湖北省武汉市首次被发现,世界卫生组织于2020年1月30日宣布其为疫情和国际关注的突发公共卫生事件,并于2020年3月11日宣布为大流行。神经外科医生不是COVID-19管理的主要人员,但他们继续照顾、探视和操作神经外科患者。对于需要非紧急手术的神经外科病例,应考虑对低危患者进行系统的新冠病毒检测。对于SRAS-COV-2检测呈阳性的病例,应推迟治疗,直到患者痊愈。神经外科手术室的高危环境包括气管内插管和拔管、鼻窦和/或乳突附近的手术、意外伤害呼吸道或消化道的手术以及在病毒污染的组织上使用产生气溶胶的器械。通过延迟所有非急诊病例,以其他麻醉方法替代全身麻醉,以绕过呼吸道的替代方法替代神经外科方法,以及减少使用产生气溶胶的仪器,降低了SARS-COV-2感染的风险。方法与材料/患者:本研究是一项关于神经外科患者COVID-19感染的叙述性研究。使用关键词SARS-COV2、神经外科和COVID-19,从Google Scholar、Medline和PubMed检索所有相关文章(约52篇),并对其进行审查和批判性分析。结果:神经外科医生可以改变新冠肺炎患者的神经外科手术常规,如延迟所有非急诊病例,用其他麻醉方式代替全身麻醉,用旁路呼吸道替代神经外科入路,减少气溶胶产生仪器的使用,以及术前进行SRAS-COV-2检测。结论:为降低新冠肺炎在神经外科的传播风险,可以改变常规的神经外科手术方案。如果不预防COVID-19传播,所有神经外科医生、工作人员和患者都会感染COVID-19。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Neurosurgery Practice During the COVID-19 Pandemic
Background and Aim: The viral agent in severe acute respiratory distress syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is the cause of the novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). It was first identified in December 2019 in the city of Wuhan, Hubei, China, and the World Health Organization declared it as an outbreak and a Public Health Emergency of International Concern on 30 January 2020, and a pandemic on 11 March 2020. Neurosurgeons are not prime in COVID-19 management but they continue for caring, visiting, and operating neurosurgical patients. In neurosurgical cases that need non-urgent operation, systematic SARS-CoV-2 testing of low-risk patients should be considered. In cases with positive SRAS-COV-2 testing, the procedures should be delayed until they are cured. The high-risk settings in the neurosurgical operation room are endotracheal intubation and extubation, operations in the vicinity of sinuses and/or mastoids, operations with accidental injury to respiratory or digestive tracts, and usage of aerosol-generating instruments on virioncontaminated tissues. The risk of SARS-COV-2 infection is decreased by delaying all nonemergent cases, replacing general anesthesia with other anesthesia methods, replacing neurosurgical approaches with alternative approaches that bypass the respiratory tract, and decreasing the usage of aerosol-generating instruments. Methods and Materials/Patients: This is a narrative study about COVID-19 infection in neurosurgery. Using the keywords SARS-COV2, neurosurgery, and COVID-19, all the relevant articles (about 52) were retrieved from Google Scholar, Medline, and PubMed and reviewed and critically analyzed. Results: Neurosurgeons can change neurosurgical routines in COVID-19 patients such as delaying all nonemergent cases, replacing general anesthesia with other anesthesia methods, replacing neurosurgical approaches with alternative approaches that bypass the respiratory tract, decreasing the usage of aerosol-generating instruments, and doing preoperative SRAS-COV-2 testing. Conclusion: For decreasing the risk of COVID-19 transmission in neurosurgery, we can change routine neurosurgical protocols. Without the prevention of COVID-19 transmission, all neurosurgeons, personnel, and patients will contract COVID-19.
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