Articles: general-anesthesia.
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Pediatric neurology · Oct 1996
Review Case ReportsRhabdomyolysis and anesthesia: a report of two cases and review of the literature.
Rhabdomyolysis occurred in two apparently healthy boys aged 9.5 and 5.5 years after general anesthesia with suxamethonium. Mild hyperkalemia and renal failure were observed in the first patient, who was subsequently diagnosed with Becker dystrophy. In the second patient, the clinical presentation was not classic for malignant hyperthermia and a muscle biopsy failed to disclose any pathological finding. ⋯ Forty-nine (74%) cases were caused by an underlying, mostly unrecognized congenital muscle disease, and 14 (21%) cases were caused by malignant hyperthermia susceptibility. Hyperkalemia (23 patients), cardiac arrhythmias (38 patients), renal failure (4 patients), and death (11 patients) were the most serious complications of anesthesia-associated rhabdomyolysis. The neuromuscular blocking agent suxamethonium had been used in at least 43 of the patients reported in the literature.
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We pointed out in the first of these two articles that the commonest cause of an anaesthetic disaster in young healthy patients is a loss of airway patency then a failure to intubate occurring unexpectedly in the absence of head or neck pathology. Upper airway obstruction is a very common complication of general anaesthesia and all anaesthetists must be trained in the management of this problem. Less obvious are the changes that can occur in the lower airways which can impair gas exchange by increasing ventilation-perfusion mismatch. This article is concerned with these pathophysiological changes that occur during general anaesthesia.
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Some problems of the regional anesthesia are discussed in the first part of the paper: the kind and the length of the needles, the anesthetic substances used, the retrobulbar and parabulbar technique, the complications. In the second part of the paper the effects of the drugs used in general anesthesia on the intraocular pressure and the possibilities of preventing and treating the oculocardiac reflex are show.
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Clinical Trial
Safety and efficacy of the laryngeal mask airway. A prospective survey of 1400 children.
A survey of laryngeal mask airway usage in 1400 infants and children by ten trainee anaesthetists was undertaken to provide information about insertion and complication rates using the standard insertion technique and a limited range of standardised anaesthetic techniques. Placement was successful in 90% (1258/1400) at the first attempt, 8% (112/1400) at the second attempt and 2% (29/1400) required an alternative technique of insertion. One patient vomited during insertion and the procedure was abandoned, but aspiration did not occur. ⋯ There was a significant decrease in problems with increasing experience (p < 0.001). There was no major morbidity associated with use of the device. We conclude that the laryngeal mask provides a safe and effective form of airway management for infants and children in the hands of supervised anaesthesia trainees both for spontaneous and controlled ventilation using either isoflurane or total intravenous anaesthesia.