Masui. The Japanese journal of anesthesiology
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The authors describe the pubic tubercle side approach of the obturator nerve block for the management of adductor muscle constriction associated with the transurethral resection of the lateral wall bladder tumor. ⋯ The pubic tubercle side approach of the obturator nerve was useful and without complications in comparison with the traditional approach.
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A 68-year man with severe Parkinson's disease who had been implanted with deep brain stimulators into both sides, received an emergency surgery uneventfully under general anesthesia with standard monitoring. During the operation, the surgeon turned off the impulse generators and used bipolar diathermy. Postoperatively, he had transient episodes of severe Parkinson symptoms, which were controled by levodopa drugs.
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Case Reports
[Usability of AirWay Scope for awake tracheal intubation in a burn patient with difficult airway].
The AirWay Scope (AWS; PENTAX Corporation, Tokyo, Japan) is a newly developed rigid video laryngoscope with a built-in LCD monitor that provides accurate verification of tube passage through the vocal cords during tracheal intubation procedures. The blade is shaped to fit the oropharyngeal anatomy, which enables operators to achieve an optimal view for tracheal intubation without requiring alignment of the oral, pharyngeal, and laryngeal axes. We used an AWS for awake intubation in a 34-year-old male burn patient with a difficult airway under conscious sedation obtained with infusion of dexmedetomidine (DEX). ⋯ Thereafter, insertion of the AWS gave a Cormack grade 1 glottic view, and endotracheal anesthesia was provided by use of a modified spray tube through the AWS blade without patient anxiety or discomfort. The trachea was intubated using the AWS without respiratory depression or other complications while the patient was sedated (Ramsay sedation scale class 4). We consider the AWS to be useful for awake tracheal intubation in patients with a difficult airway.
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Case Reports
[Case of unexpected epiglottic cyst found during endotracheal intubation by an emergency medical technician trainee].
A 66-year-old man was scheduled for endoscopic right uretherectomy under general anesthesia. On the pre-anesthesia examination, the patient had no respiratory symptoms. An informed consent for endotracheal intubation by a trainee for emergency medical technician was obtained on the examination. ⋯ Although the patient had been informed about the cyst before the surgery, he did not disclose it as he did not have any symptom from the cyst. This case suggest that unpredictable airway problem could occur in any anesthetic practice. The video-laryngoscope was useful in such a case to prevent fatal complication developing on endotracheal intubation by a trainee, and also it is a good tool to show the trainee how severe the cyst related-airway trouble would be.
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We report a case of lethal air embolism just after spray of adhesive-fibrinogen and factor XIII aerosol during laparoscopic surgery. A 76-year-old man underwent laparoscopic partial nephrectomy for the left renal cancer. ⋯ Trans-esophageal echocardiography and computed tomography after cardiopulmonary resuscitation confirmed multiple air embolism. The use of a spray aerosol during laparoscopic surgery may be associated with the risk of lethal air embolism.