📌 Quick Tip: Managing COPD Before Surgery — What You Shouldn’t Miss

👉👉 🇺🇸 All Posts 🇬🇧 / 🇯🇵 記事一覧 🇯🇵 👈👈

♦️ Introduction

Your COPD patient is on the schedule next week. You open the chart — wheezing, recent cough. 🤔 Should you go ahead, optimize, or postpone?
Let’s break down what the latest GOLD 2025 guidelines recommend.


🫁 Step 1: Confirm Stability Before Surgery

The #1 rule from GOLD 2025: no recent exacerbations.
If the patient had worsening dyspnea, purulent sputum, or needed antibiotics in the past 4 weeks, elective surgery should wait.
Acute flares dramatically raise the risk of postoperative pulmonary complications.


💨 Step 2: Continue Maintenance Inhalers

Never stop inhalers before surgery.
Continue beta-2 agonists, anticholinergics, and inhaled corticosteroids through the day of surgery to maintain airway tone and minimize intra-operative bronchospasm.


🧪 Step 3: Assess the Real Risk

Not all COPD cases need a full PFT panel.
Reserve testing for:

  • Thoracic or high-risk procedures
  • FEV₁ suspected < 50%
  • Chronic CO₂ retention

For stable, moderate-risk cases, a focused clinical assessment often gives enough information.


⚙️ Preoperative Optimization Works

Even 2 weeks of focused prep helps:

  • Respiratory physiotherapy & incentive spirometry
  • Smoking cessation (the longer, the better — ≥ 8 weeks ideal)
  • Nutrition optimization

Don’t forget to check hemoglobin and albumin — low albumin predicts poor outcomes and is often correctable.


📝 Take Home Points

  • Confirm stability (no recent flare), keep all inhalers, and optimize nutrition.
    Stable COPD = safer anesthesia.

📚 References & Further reading

  • GOLD 2025 Report
  • Lee HJ et al. Tuberc Respir Dis. 2025; 88(1): 90-108
X(旧twitter)でも更新通知してます!
  • URLをコピーしました!
Contents