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Upcoming webinar: Optimising analgesia monitoring with Surgical Pleth Index™ (SPI): What can we learn from an expert?

Speakers

Excessive intraoperative stress evoked by surgical nociceptive stimulation may influence patients’ outcome, length of hospital stays, and overall costs of hospital care. To achieve adequate analgesia (antinociception) blunting the intraoperative stress response, most notably haemodynamic instability, it is crucial to use an adequate variable for balancing the nociception-antinociception level during general anaesthesia.

Traditionally, clinical signs like somatic (movement) or autonomic (tachycardia, hypertension, sweating, and tearing) responses are used to evaluate whether analgesia is adequate, which has been proved to be unreliable demonstrating low specificity.

Surgical Pleth Index (SPI) aims to quantify the intraoperative stress level during general anaesthesia. Several studies have shown SPI’s potential for detection of nociceptive stimuli and suggest that SPI could be used for guiding specific opioids administration, which may result in lower drugs consumption, more stable haemodynamics, and fewer unwanted events.

In this webinar, the participants will receive an overview of the major clinical outcomes that may be possible by using SPI and will learn how to best leverage this measurement during clinical practice.
In addition, we will cover the advantages of combining both analgesia and depth of anaesthesia monitoring in order to help you achieve greater haemodynamic stability and faster patient recovery.

Optimising analgesia monitoring with Surgical Pleth Index™ (SPI): What can we learn from an expert?

Wednesday, May 8, 2024 | 9:00am CEST | 3:00pm SGT | 5:00pm AEST

Prof. Dr. Med. Matthias Lars Grünewald, MHBA

Prof. Dr. Med. Matthias Lars Grünewald, MHBA

Chair of Department
Specialist in anaesthesiology, intensive care, and emergency medicine | Evangelic Amalie Sieveking Hospital

Prof. Matthias Grünewald has been the Chief Physician at the Clinic for Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine at the Evangelical Amalie Sieveking Hospital since October 1, 2022. He studied medicine at Charité Berlin and completed his training as a specialist in anaesthesiology at the University Medical Center Schleswig-Holstein (UKSH) in Kiel. Prof. Grünewald is specialised in hospital management and has been the Deputy Clinic Director at the UKSH in Kiel since 2017. In UKSH specifically, Prof. Grünewald performed a quite intense scientific work on patient individualized control of medications and haemodynamic management.