• Anesthesia and analgesia · Nov 1992

    Comparative Study

    Venous air embolism in prone dogs positioned with the abdomen hanging freely: percentage of gas retrieved and success rate of resuscitation.

    • A A Artru.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle 98195.
    • Anesth. Analg. 1992 Nov 1; 75 (5): 715-9.

    AbstractBased on reports of fatal venous air embolism (VAE) occurring during lumbar laminectomy and spinal fusion in prone patients positioned with the abdomen hanging freely, it has been recommended that monitoring for VAE should be used for such cases and that a multiorificed central venous catheter should be inserted for aspiration of VAE. The present study was designed to examine aspiration of VAE when prone dogs positioned with the abdomen hanging freely were given a fatal VAE via a femoral vein. Twenty-one dogs were anesthetized with halothane and nitrous oxide in oxygen and positioned with the abdomen ventral and hanging freely, the head fixed in a stereotaxic frame, the upper extremities resting on a surface approximately 10 cm below the level of the stereotaxic frame, and the lower extremities on a surface below the level of the upper extremities (to ensure that VAE entering the inferior vena cava would ascend toward the heart). In the control group (n = 7), a central catheter was placed but was not used to aspirate VAE. In a second group (n = 7), a Cook Bunegin-Albin multiorificed catheter was inserted; and in a third group (n = 7), an American Edwards 7F Swan-Ganz catheter was inserted. Dogs were then given a predetermined lethal dose of air (5 mL/kg) over 30 s via the femoral vein. In groups 2 and 3, attempts to aspirate VAE were begun with the first decrease in expired CO2. The amounts of gas retrieved (expressed as a percent of the injected air) and the incidence of successful resuscitation were compared.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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