A&A practice
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A 69-year-old man underwent total laryngopharyngectomy with radial forearm free flap reconstruction. He had lost 15 kg over a period of 6 months and did not receive any preoperative nutritional workup or management. ⋯ Diagnostic workup only revealed hypoalbuminemia and hypoproteinemia. We hypothesized relative overdosage of sedative anesthetic drugs due to preoperative malnutrition accentuated by intraoperative fluid administration.
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A parturient with unknown thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) received spinal anesthesia for cesarean delivery with subsequent discovery of a platelet count of 7000 × 10/L. Neurologic recovery was normal. ⋯ There is reporting bias in the literature toward cases in which severely thrombocytopenic patients sustain complications after regional anesthesia. It is important to report all cases of neuraxial anesthesia in severely thrombocytopenic patients, including those such as ours, wherein patients recover normally.
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A 65-year-old man undergoing posterior cervical decompression and fusion demonstrated absent lower extremity evoked potential (EP) after prone positioning and before incision. Localized EP change pointed to either a technical or positional culprit. ⋯ During the test, we observed both symmetrical and asymmetrical hemispheric changes in density spectral array β and γ bands that correlated with awakening, eye-opening, and extremity movements. By providing real-time information on brain state, processed electroencephalogram (EEG) can facilitate a safe wake-up test by showing high-power β and γ activities that precede awakening.
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We present a case in which the Dräger Primus (Dräger Medical AG&Co KG, Lüberck, Germany) anesthesia monitor displayed false readings of low end-tidal carbon dioxide (EtCO2) immediately after intubation. The patient's physical examination, vital signs, and arterial blood gases were normal. ⋯ The defective monitor gas flow rates and gas calibration values were inappropriately low. Partial opening of the solenoid zero valve allowed entrainment of room air, which caused artifactual dilution of the gas sample.
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Verbal orders in the operating room between the surgeon and circulating nurse are prevalent at many institutions. We present a case in which a communication breakdown involving a verbal order resulted in the patient receiving an excessively high dose of epinephrine via subcuticular infiltration. ⋯ The hemodynamic changes were treated, and the patient suffered no long-term sequelae. This report emphasizes the need to have strategies in place to prevent medication errors.