Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Korea University Guro Hospital, Korea University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
Korean J Anesthesiol. 2024 Feb;77(1):31-45. doi: 10.4097/kja.23158. Epub 2023 Mar 17.
Surgical pleth index (SPI) monitoring is a representative, objective nociception-monitoring device that measures nociception using photoplethysmographic signals. It is easy to apply to patients and the numerical calculation formula is intuitively easy to understand; therefore, its clinical interpretation is simple. Several studies have demonstrated its efficacy and utility. Compared with hemodynamic parameters, the SPI can detect the degree of nociception during surgery under general anesthesia with greater accuracy, and therefore can provide better guidance for the administration of various opioids, including remifentanil, fentanyl, and sufentanil. Indeed, SPI-guided analgesia is associated with lower intraoperative opioid consumption, faster patient recovery, and comparable or lower levels of postoperative pain and rates of adverse events compared with conventional analgesia. In addition, SPI monitoring allows for the degree of postoperative pain and analgesic requirements to be predicted through the SPI values immediately before patient arousal. However, because patient age, effective circulating volume, position, concomitant medication and anesthetic regimen and level of consciousness may be confounding factors in SPI monitoring, clinicians must be careful when interpreting SPI values. In addition, as SPI values can differ depending on anesthetic and analgesic regimens and the underlying disease, an awareness of the effects of these variables with an understanding of the advantages and disadvantages of SPI monitoring compared to other nociception monitoring devices is essential. Therefore, this review aimed to help clinicians perform optimal SPI-guided analgesia and to assist with the establishment of future research designs through clarifying current usefulness and limitations of SPI monitoring in perioperative pain management.
手术 pleth 指数(SPI)监测是一种有代表性的、客观的痛觉监测设备,它使用光体积描记信号来测量痛觉。它易于应用于患者,数值计算公式直观易懂;因此,其临床解释简单。几项研究已经证明了其疗效和实用性。与血流动力学参数相比,SPI 可以更准确地检测全身麻醉下手术过程中的痛觉程度,因此可以更好地指导各种阿片类药物的给药,包括瑞芬太尼、芬太尼和舒芬太尼。事实上,与常规镇痛相比,SPI 指导的镇痛与术中阿片类药物消耗减少、患者恢复更快以及术后疼痛和不良事件发生率相当或更低相关。此外,SPI 监测允许通过患者苏醒前的 SPI 值预测术后疼痛程度和镇痛需求。然而,由于患者年龄、有效循环血量、体位、伴随用药以及麻醉方案和意识水平可能是 SPI 监测的混杂因素,临床医生在解释 SPI 值时必须小心。此外,由于 SPI 值可能因麻醉和镇痛方案以及潜在疾病而异,因此了解这些变量的影响,并了解 SPI 监测与其他痛觉监测设备相比的优缺点,对于进行最佳的 SPI 指导镇痛至关重要。因此,本综述旨在帮助临床医生进行最佳的 SPI 指导镇痛,并通过阐明 SPI 监测在围手术期疼痛管理中的当前有用性和局限性,协助未来的研究设计。