Anesthesiology of Perioperative Medicine addresses complex patient management and the pharmacology of recent anesthesia medicines that have changed the field. The course addresses anesthetic care for morbidly obese sleep apnea patients, severe liver disease patients, the elderly, and trauma patients. Perioperative Medicine Part 1 – General Anesthesiology’s second half emphasizes narcotic avoidance and speedier recovery. This section covers opioid-free anesthesia pharmacology, including ketamine, methadone, suggamadex, and liposomal bupivacaine.
Learning Goals of Anesthesiology of Perioperative Medicine:
After Anesthesiology of Perioperative Medicine, participants can:
- Develop skills in identifying and treating postoperative cognitive dysfunction, morbidly obese, and sleep apnea patients, liver disease patients, and elderly surgery patients.
- Emergency trauma management tips
- Discover the benefits of opioid-free anesthesia, ketamine, and methadone for your patients, Suggamadex, and liposomal Bupivacaine for postoperative pain management.
TOPICS / SPEAKERS of Anesthesiology of Perioperative Medicine:
- Postoperative Cognitive Dysfunction
James Robinson, MD, PhD - Anesthesia for Patients with Morbid Obesity
Patricia Dalby, MD - Anesthesia for Patients with Severe Liver Disease
Catalin Ezaru, MD - Perioperative Anesthesia Care of the Geriatric Patient
Marsha Ritter-Jones, MD - Anesthetic Management of the Trauma Patient
Peter Ritchie, MD - Opioid Free Anesthesia
Gerhardt Konig, MD - Pharmacology that has Changed Anesthesia Practice: Ketamine and Methadone
Kristin Ondecko Ligda, MD, FASA - Pharmacology that has Changed Anesthesia Practice: Liposomal Bupivacaine
Peter Ritchie, MD - Pharmacology that has Changed Anesthesia Practice: Suggamadex
Evan Lebovitz, MD
See Also: Harvard Anesthesiology Update 2023 (75 MP4 + 57 PDF)
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