Perioperative and anesthetic deaths: toxicological and medico legal aspects
Abstract Background Anesthesia has become safer during decades, though there is still a preventable mortality; the complexity of medical and surgical interventions, increasingly older and sicker patients, has created a host of new hazards in anesthesiology. In this paper, some of these perioperative...
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doaj-e2b79e617e9642b0bcfbb71afd21fbc82020-11-25T03:33:39ZengSpringerOpenEgyptian Journal of Forensic Sciences2090-59392019-05-019111210.1186/s41935-019-0126-6Perioperative and anesthetic deaths: toxicological and medico legal aspectsAntonina Argo0Stefania Zerbo1Antonietta Lanzarone2Roberto Buscemi3Roberta Roccuzzo4Steven B. Karch5Department Pro.Mi.Se, Legal Medicine, School of Medicine, University of PalermoDepartment Pro.Mi.Se, Legal Medicine, School of Medicine, University of PalermoDepartment Pro.Mi.Se, Legal Medicine, School of Medicine, University of PalermoDepartment Pro.Mi.Se, Legal Medicine, School of Medicine, University of PalermoDepartment Pro.Mi.Se, Legal Medicine, School of Medicine, University of PalermoFFFLM, ConsultantAbstract Background Anesthesia has become safer during decades, though there is still a preventable mortality; the complexity of medical and surgical interventions, increasingly older and sicker patients, has created a host of new hazards in anesthesiology. In this paper, some of these perioperative (PO) fatal adverse events are investigated in terms of health responsibility. Selective literature research in several data bases, concerning perioperative and anesthetic deaths and medical responsibility, was performed. Main text A generally accepted definition of the anesthesia and perioperatory-related death still remains one of the major concerns in forensic pathology, and the terms “operative deaths” and “anesthetic deaths” are usually applied inaccurately within the medico-legal literature. Such events involve comprehensively PO fatalities and allow for subtle separation of natural and unnatural death, at least from the prospective of forensic pathology. Iatrogenic deaths in this field can be separated into some major categories, as attributable to previous patient’s unfavorable conditions or depending from surgical procedure per se (such as PO cardiac and cerebrovascular events). In this review, the authors carried out syntheses of specific research areas regarding epidemiology, complications of general and spinal anesthetic, failure in airway management and patient’s circulatory homeostasis, and adverse drugs reactions; analysis considering the challenge of anesthetic-related mortality, epidemiology and classifications, by indicating causal chain of death, in respect of both contributing and associated anesthetic and surgery facts. Conclusions Perioperative quality control programs and its relevance for medico-legal evaluation are emphasized as, although mortality rates have decreased worldwide over the last decades, however, preventable drug-related deaths still happen. Such fatal events have to be considered within the field of forensic pathology experts, with regard of malpractice claims, to implement a strategy for preventing potentially fatal complications.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41935-019-0126-6AnesthesiaCausal chainDrugsEpidemiologyErrorsFatalities |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Antonina Argo Stefania Zerbo Antonietta Lanzarone Roberto Buscemi Roberta Roccuzzo Steven B. Karch |
spellingShingle |
Antonina Argo Stefania Zerbo Antonietta Lanzarone Roberto Buscemi Roberta Roccuzzo Steven B. Karch Perioperative and anesthetic deaths: toxicological and medico legal aspects Egyptian Journal of Forensic Sciences Anesthesia Causal chain Drugs Epidemiology Errors Fatalities |
author_facet |
Antonina Argo Stefania Zerbo Antonietta Lanzarone Roberto Buscemi Roberta Roccuzzo Steven B. Karch |
author_sort |
Antonina Argo |
title |
Perioperative and anesthetic deaths: toxicological and medico legal aspects |
title_short |
Perioperative and anesthetic deaths: toxicological and medico legal aspects |
title_full |
Perioperative and anesthetic deaths: toxicological and medico legal aspects |
title_fullStr |
Perioperative and anesthetic deaths: toxicological and medico legal aspects |
title_full_unstemmed |
Perioperative and anesthetic deaths: toxicological and medico legal aspects |
title_sort |
perioperative and anesthetic deaths: toxicological and medico legal aspects |
publisher |
SpringerOpen |
series |
Egyptian Journal of Forensic Sciences |
issn |
2090-5939 |
publishDate |
2019-05-01 |
description |
Abstract Background Anesthesia has become safer during decades, though there is still a preventable mortality; the complexity of medical and surgical interventions, increasingly older and sicker patients, has created a host of new hazards in anesthesiology. In this paper, some of these perioperative (PO) fatal adverse events are investigated in terms of health responsibility. Selective literature research in several data bases, concerning perioperative and anesthetic deaths and medical responsibility, was performed. Main text A generally accepted definition of the anesthesia and perioperatory-related death still remains one of the major concerns in forensic pathology, and the terms “operative deaths” and “anesthetic deaths” are usually applied inaccurately within the medico-legal literature. Such events involve comprehensively PO fatalities and allow for subtle separation of natural and unnatural death, at least from the prospective of forensic pathology. Iatrogenic deaths in this field can be separated into some major categories, as attributable to previous patient’s unfavorable conditions or depending from surgical procedure per se (such as PO cardiac and cerebrovascular events). In this review, the authors carried out syntheses of specific research areas regarding epidemiology, complications of general and spinal anesthetic, failure in airway management and patient’s circulatory homeostasis, and adverse drugs reactions; analysis considering the challenge of anesthetic-related mortality, epidemiology and classifications, by indicating causal chain of death, in respect of both contributing and associated anesthetic and surgery facts. Conclusions Perioperative quality control programs and its relevance for medico-legal evaluation are emphasized as, although mortality rates have decreased worldwide over the last decades, however, preventable drug-related deaths still happen. Such fatal events have to be considered within the field of forensic pathology experts, with regard of malpractice claims, to implement a strategy for preventing potentially fatal complications. |
topic |
Anesthesia Causal chain Drugs Epidemiology Errors Fatalities |
url |
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41935-019-0126-6 |
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