A&A practice
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Case Reports
Rapid Induction of Buprenorphine/Naloxone for Chronic Pain Using a Microdosing Regimen: A Case Report.
Buprenorphine is an effective treatment for chronic pain and may reduce opioid-induced hyperalgesia. However, its pharmacological properties make its induction challenging, time-consuming, and can precipitate opioid withdrawal. We present the case of a 66-year-old woman with inadequately controlled postoperative pain despite escalating doses of oxycodone and methadone, who was successfully transitioned to buprenorphine/naloxone using a rapid microinduction technique without precipitating opioid withdrawal. Rapid induction provides an alternative method for transitioning patients from other opioids to buprenorphine/naloxone and facilitates transition of patients with chronic pain to buprenorphine therapy within a shorter window compared to currently existing protocols.
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Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP) is a rare autoimmune disease that targets the peripheral nervous system. The literature on the use of regional anesthesia in CIDP is limited. We report a patient with CIDP who received a combined spinal-epidural (CSE) and saphenous and popliteal peripheral nerve blocks (PNBs) for ankle surgery. ⋯ On approximately the fourth postoperative day, the patient reported a worsening of baseline CIDP symptoms in all extremities. Given the diffuse presentation, the CIDP exacerbation was attributed to the perioperative stress response. The exacerbation improved by 4 months postoperatively.
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Clevidipine-induced pulmonary shunting is a little-reported adverse effect, manifesting as refractory hypoxemia, which may cause significant patient harm. We present the case of a mechanically ventilated patient admitted to the intensive care unit following a neurosurgical procedure. ⋯ The hypoxemia recovered within 1 hour of clevidipine discontinuation. Though other calcium channel blockers have been reported to cause pulmonary shunting from vasodilation, this is a novel case report for clevidipine-induced hypoxemia.
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Case Reports
Eighteenth Century Complications With 21st Century General Anesthesia: A Case Report of Scurvy.
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) may be associated with self-imposed dietary restrictions causing nutritional deficiencies, and the anesthesiologist must be aware of their potential clinical implications. Because humans are unable to produce ascorbic acid through endogenous metabolic pathways and children with ASD may avoid vitamin C-containing foods, vitamin C deficiency, or scurvy, may develop in patients scheduled for general anesthesia. Vitamin C deficiency may cause dysfunction in autonomic nervous system processes or pulmonary hypertension resulting in unexpected hemodynamic lability. We describe a child with ASD and limited dietary options leading to undiagnosed scurvy and intraoperative hypotension.
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Case Reports
A Novel Approach to Postoperative Ear Pain-Greater Auricular Nerve Block Catheter: A Case Report.
A 70-year-old man presented for repair of an ear avulsion injury sustained from an all-terrain vehicle accident. A continuous technique using a catheter for a greater auricular nerve (GAN) block was performed in the preoperative area followed by general anesthesia in the operating room. ⋯ The GAN catheter was kept in place for 3 days with near-complete pain relief per the patient. To our knowledge, there are no case reports that describe a continuous GAN technique for surgery and postoperative pain.