2 research outputs found

    Transverse myelitis following general and thoracic epidural anaesthesia

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    Acute bacterial transverse myelitis, secondary to an epidural catheter, developed in a 49-year-old man who underwent surgery for carcinoma of the left lung. Left pneumonectomy was performed under combined general and epidural (Th6-7) anesthesia. The operative procedure, anaesthesia and early postoperative course were uneventful. On the fifth postoperative day, the patient developed neurological deficits consistent with high-level paraplegia. Elevated inflammatory parameters along with the results of cerebrospinal fluid analysis and magnetic resonance imaging were suggestive of acute transverse bacterial myelitis of the dorsal part of the spinal cord secondary to epidural analgesia. Despite prompt antibiotic therapy, anti-oedema treatment and rehabilitation, the neurological deficit failed to resolve

    Thoracic Anesthesia during the COVID-19 Pandemic: 2021 Updated Recommendations by the European Association of Cardiothoracic Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care (EACTAIC) Thoracic Subspecialty Committee

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    The novel coronavirus pandemic has radically changed the landscape of normal surgical practice. Lifesaving cancer surgery, however, remains a clinical priority, and there is an increasing need to fully define the optimal oncologic management of patients with varying stages of lung cancer, allowing prioritization of which thoracic procedures should be performed in the current era. Healthcare providers and managers should not ignore the risk of a bimodal peak of mortality in patients with lung cancer; an imminent spike due to mortality from acute coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection, and a secondary peak reflecting an excess of cancer-related mortality among patients whose treatments were deemed less urgent, delayed, or cancelled
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