Annales françaises d'anesthèsie et de rèanimation
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Ann Fr Anesth Reanim · Dec 2014
Review Meta Analysis[Epidemiology of cerebral perioperative vascular accidents.]
Stroke is a well-described postoperative complication, after carotid and cardiac surgery. On the contrary, few studies are available concerning postoperative stroke in general non-cardiac non-carotid surgery. The high morbid-mortality of stroke justifies an extended analysis of recent literature. ⋯ Postoperative stroke is a quality marker of the surgical teams' skill and has specific onset time and induces an increase of postoperative mortality.
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Ann Fr Anesth Reanim · Dec 2014
Review[Specific anaesthetic procedures for nasal and sinus surgery.]
In nasal and sinus surgery, the anaesthetist must share the operating field with the surgeon and take into account some patients' specific pathologies. Bleeding must be avoided by different means but the accurate gesture of the surgeon, added to the properties of the new anaesthetic drugs, may reduce the risk of this functional surgery.
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Ann Fr Anesth Reanim · Dec 2014
Case Reports[DRESS in intensive care unit: A challenging diagnosis and treatment.]
Drug reaction with eosinophilia ans systemic symptoms (DRESS) is a severe medication-induced adverse reaction, which can threaten patient's life. Clinical symptoms and organ failures present wide variability. Furthermore, the latency period is long, so that diagnosis could be a real challenge in the intensive care unit. We report the case of a woman developing a DRESS after neurosurgery complicated by a nosocomial infection.
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Anaesthetists often stand in the front line to manage postpartum neurological deficits, although epidural analgesia is rarely responsible for these complications. An epidural analgesia was performed to relieve pain during spontaneous labor in a 34-year-old parturient. An emergency C-section was subsequently required due to fetal heart rate abnormalities. ⋯ Epidural bleeding after labor epidural analgesia is a rare complication that may jeopardize the functional prognosis. It may be difficult in some cases to differentiate an upper plexus injury due to labor and delivery from a central epidural analgesia-related nerve root lesion. Fetal head compression at the pelvic brim may induce neurological deficits in several well-differentiated nervous territories, thus mimicking an anaesthetic-induced perimedullar radiculopathy.