• Br J Anaesth · Apr 2004

    Case Reports

    A fine balance--one-lung ventilation in a patient with Eisenmenger syndrome.

    • A R Heller, R J Litz, and T Koch.
    • Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus, Harvard Medical International Associated Institution, Fetscherstrasse 74, D-01307 Dresden, Germany. axel.heller@mailbox.tu-dresden.de
    • Br J Anaesth. 2004 Apr 1; 92 (4): 587-90.

    AbstractA 38-yr-old woman with an atrial septum defect and Eisenmenger syndrome was scheduled for a lung biopsy via thoracoscopy during one-lung ventilation. Fluids were given to increase central venous pressure to 8 mm Hg, an epidural catheter was inserted at the sixth thoracic intervertebral space and ropivacaine 0.3%, 6 ml were given. Careful balance of systemic and pulmonary vascular resistance is crucial in Eisenmenger syndrome, so norepinephrine (0.14 mg kg(-1) min(-1)) was infused before general anaesthesia was started with fentanyl 4 mg kg(-1), ketamine 2 mg kg(-1), pancuronium 1 mg and succinylcholine 2 mg kg(-1). Anaesthesia was maintained with propofol 4-8 mg kg(-1) h(-1). To control pulmonary artery pressure, ventilation was performed with oxygen 100% and nitric oxide 20 ppm. Surgery and anaesthesia course were uneventful and the patient was extubated. However, pleural haemorrhage required treatment with blood components, re-intubation on the second postoperative day and removal of the haematoma by mini-thoracotomy. A step-by-step approach using a balanced combination of regional and general anaesthesia, controlled fluid administration, norepinephrine and inhaled nitric oxide preserved a stable circulation even during one-lung ventilation. The diagnostic value of lung biopsy must be weighed against the possibility of life-threatening haemorrhage.

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