• Der Anaesthesist · Jul 2013

    Case Reports

    Bupivacaine crystal deposits after long-term epidural infusion.

    • I Balga, H Gerber, X H Schorno, F Aebersold Keller, and H-P Oehen.
    • Department of Anaesthesiology, Surgical Intensive Care, Emergency Care Medicine and Pain Medicine, Kantonsspital Lucerne, Lucerne, Switzerland. ingrid.balga@gmail.com
    • Anaesthesist. 2013 Jul 1;62(7):543-8.

    AbstractThe case of a 45-year-old male patient (body weight 52 kg, height 1.61 m) with a locally invasive gastric carcinoma infiltrating into the retroperitoneal space is reported. Because of severe cancer pain a tunnelled thoracic epidural catheter (EC) was placed at thoracic spinal level 7/8 and a local anesthetic (LA) mixture of bupivacaine 0.25 % and morphine 0.005 % was infused continuously at 6 ml h(-1). To optimize pain therapy the concentration was doubled (bupivacaine 0.5 %, morphine 0.01 %) 3 months later but the infusion rate was reduced to 3 ml h(-1) thus the total daily dose did not change. The patient died 6 months after initiation of the epidural analgesia from the underlying disease. The total amount of bupivacaine infused was 69 g and of morphine 1.37 g. The patient never reported any neurological complications. The autopsy revealed large white crystalline deposits in the thoracic epidural space which were identified as bupivacaine base by infrared spectrometry. Morphine could not be detected. A histological examination showed unreactive fatty tissue necrosis within the crystalline deposits but nerve tissue could not be identified. It is concluded that the bupivacaine crystalline deposits arose due to precipitation but the clinical significance with regard to sensory level and neuraxial tissue toxicity is unknown.

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