• Indian J Anaesth · Jul 2010

    Non-cardiogenic pulmonary oedema after neostigmine given for reversal: A report of two cases.

    • Lalit Kumar Raiger, Udita Naithani, Bhavani S Vijay, Pradeep Gupta, and Vaibhav Bhargava.
    • Department of Anaesthesiology and Critical Care, R.N.T. Medical College and AG of Hospital, Udaipur - 313 001, Rajasthan, India.
    • Indian J Anaesth. 2010 Jul 1;54(4):338-41.

    AbstractNon-cardiogenic pulmonary oedema (NCPE) is a clinical syndrome characterized by simultaneous presence of severe hypoxemia, bilateral alveolar infiltrates on chest radiograph, and no evidence of left atrial hypertension/congestive heart failure/fluid overload. The diagnosis of drug-related NCPE relies upon documented exclusion of other causes of NCPE like gastric aspiration, sepsis, trauma, negative pressure pulmonary oedema, etc. We describe two cases (45-year male and 6-year male), who had undergone elective surgery under general anaesthesia. They developed NCPE within 3-5 minutes after administration of 'neostigmine-glycopyrrolate' used to reverse residual neuromuscular blockade. Both patients were treated successfully with mechanical ventilatory support, and adjuvant therapy, viz., frusemide, dopamine, steroids. This report emphasizes that this fatal complication may be seen with neostigmine, the pathogenic mechanism remains unknown, and it probably is a drug-related NCPE.

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