Der Anaesthesist
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Perioperative cardiac morbidity and mortality are a major health care challenge with important individual as well as economic aspects. Up to 30% of all perioperative complications and up to 50% of all postoperative deaths are related to cardiac causes. Perioperative myocardial ischemia, which occurs in more than 40% of patients with or at risk for coronary artery disease and undergoing noncardiac surgery, represents a dynamic predictor of postoperative cardiac complications. ⋯ This is particularly relevant in high risk patients with preoperative stress-induced ischemic episodes. In clinical practice, therefore, chronically administered anti-ischemic drugs should also be administered on the day of surgery and during the postoperative period. In untreated patients with or at risk for coronary artery disease and who have to undergo urgent surgical procedures without the opportunity of preoperative anti-ischemic intervention, perioperative administration of beta-adrenoreceptor blocking agents is mandatory.
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial
[Semi-invasive cardiac output measurement using a combined transesophageal ultrasound device. Early experiences].
Measurement of cardiac output (CO) with pulmonary artery catheter (PAC) is currently item of many discussions. We investigated the reliability of results using the noninvasive measurement of aortic blood flow (ABF) (combined Doppler- and M-Mode transesophageal ultrasound, Dynemo 3000, Sometec Inc, Paris, France). ⋯ Results of ABF detected by combined Doppler- and M-Mode-Echography are comparable with results of CO obtained by PAC. Therefore we are convinced that this noninvasive method will find its place in clinical situations of compromised CO.
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During the last 30 years a great number of case reports presented severe anaesthetic complications with sudden cardiac arrest in patients with muscular dystrophies, mostly unsuspected at the time of the event. As succinylcholine was involved in the majority of the intractable incidents with lethal outcome the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) of the United States recommended a warning of the administration of succinylcholine in young children and adolescents in 1992 and an extensive international discussion on the routine use of succinylcholine in paediatric anaesthesia. Epidemiological studies on this issue are rare. We projected an inquiry about the incidence rate and type of severe anaesthetic complications in an utmost large number of patients and families with Duchenne (DMD) and Becker type (BMD) muscular dystrophy. ⋯ Our results demonstrate that severe incidents and cardiac arrests occurred only in young children with undiagnosed DMD or BMD who received inhalational agents and succinylcholine. A cardiac arrest in 6 out of 200 families was found much more frequently than in the normal paediatric population (about 1:1000 to 1:3000). The decrease of events after 1992 (warning of the FDA) and disappearance of sudden cardiac arrests in our group of patients might be due to the world wide discussion on routine use of succinylcholine in children or the much earlier establishment of the diagnosis in our population. An early diagnosis of DMD and BMD and the avoidance of the triggering agents succinylcholine and volatile anaesthetics can reduce the risk of severe anaesthetic complications.