28 research outputs found
Anesthesia management of awake craniotomy performed under asleep-awake-asleep technique using laryngeal mask airway: Report of two cases
Asleep-awake-asleep technique of anesthesia is used during awake
craniotomy with or without securing airway. We assessed this technique
using laryngeal mask airway (LMA) in two patients. Patients underwent
awake craniotomy for epilepsy surgery and the removal of a
frontotemporal glioma. After anesthesia induction, airway was secured
using LMA. Anesthesia was maintained using oxygen, nitrous oxide and
sevoflurane, supplemented with an infusion of propofol and
remifentanil. Twenty minutes before corticography, anesthesia was
discontinued and LMA removed. Both patients were awake and cooperative
during the neurological assessment and surgery on eloquent areas. The
LMA was reinserted before the closure of the dura and remained in place
until the end of surgery. Both patients had no recall of events under
anesthesia, although experienced mild pain and discomfort during awake
phase of surgery. Both expressed complete satisfaction over the
anesthetic management. Asleep-awake-asleep technique using LMA offers
airway protection. The painful aspect of surgery can be performed under
anesthesia, hence minimizing the duration of stress and pain. Patients
remained awake and cooperative throughout the time of neurological
testing
Cardiac herniation following completion pneumonectomy for bronchiectasis
Sporadic reports on cardiac herniation are available in the literature; most of them had followed intrapericardial pneumonectomies for malignant pulmonary tumors. We present an uncommon event of heart herniation after a completion pneumonectomy indicated for chronic bronchiectasis. A 35-year-old male patient was operated for left completion pneumonectomy. A 6 cm Χ 4 cm area of adherent pericardium near the obtuse margin of heart was removed during surgery. During head-end elevation of the bed in postoperative intensive care unit, patient got accidentally tilted to the left side, which resulted in ventricular fibrillation. Chest cavity was re-opened for cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Left ventricle was found herniating through the pericardial deficiency into the left-thoracic cavity with the cardiac apex touching chest wall. During surgical re-exploration, the pericardial deficiency was closed with a synthetic Dacron patch. Hemodynamic condition remained stable in the immediate postoperative period. Patients had infection of the left thoracic cavity after 5 weeks, for which he was subjected to thoracoplasty and omentopexy. Prompt recognition with timely intervention is life saving from cardiac herniation. Strategy of closing the pericardial defect after pneumonectomy should be followed routinely, irrespective of the indication for pneumonectomy
Electrical storm: Role of stellate ganglion blockade and anesthetic implications of left cardiac sympathetic denervation
An electrical storm is usually associated with catecholaminergic surge following myocardial ischaemia and manifest as recurrent ventricular arrhythmias, requiring frequent DC shocks. Delivering repeated DC shocks induces myocardial damage and further worsens the arrhythmias, which are resistant to the antiarrhythmic drugs. Cardiac sympathetic blockade abates the excessive catecholaminergic drive and help pacifying the malignant ventricular arrhythmias. We treated the electrical storm in a 52-year-old male with ultrasound-guided left sympathetic ganglion block followed by surgical left cardiac sympathetic denervation. The patient remained symptom-free without any incident of ventricular arrhythmias for 8 months after the surgery. The ultrasonography during blockade of the stellate ganglion enhances the success rate of the technique, reduces the quantity of local anaesthetic required to produce desired effects and prevents technical complications. Supraclavicular surgical access to the upper thoracic sympathetic chain obviates the necessity for one lung ventilation and lateral decubitus during surgery, when the patient is in hemodynamically unstable condition. Sympathectomy can be performed under general anaesthesia taking cautions to avoid sympathetic stimulation in intraoperative period