Masui. The Japanese journal of anesthesiology
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Case Reports
[Anesthetic management for gastrojejunostomy in a patient with hemiplegia and recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy].
A 70-year-old man who had undergone a low anterior resection for primary rectal cancer 9 years before complained of anorexia, hemiplegia, and recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy. The anorexia was caused by duodenal stenosis due to swollen lymph nodes, the hemiplegia was caused by a metastatic brain tumor, and the recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy was caused by metastases of the cancer to the mediastinal space. ⋯ Thoracic epidural anesthesia could provide sufficient analgesia, and the operation was uneventful. In anesthetic management of an end-stage patient undergoing a palliative operation like this, we should consider the purpose of the operation, its complications, and further complications which may be induced by anesthesia in order to plan out an anesthetic regimen unlikely to lead to harmful events in perioperative period.
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Perioperative mortality and morbidity in Japan for the year 1999 were studied retrospectively. Committee on Operating Room Safety of the Japan Society of Anesthesiologists (JSA) sent confidential questionnaires to 774 Certified Training Hospitals of JSA and received answers from 60.2% of the hospitals. We analyzed their answers with special reference to ASA physical status (ASA-PS). ⋯ The major co-existing diseases or conditions leading to critical events were heart diseases in elective anesthetics, and hemorrhagic shock in emergency anesthetics. We reconfirmed that ASA-PS is beneficial to predict perioperative mortality and morbidity. It also seems likely that we should make much more efforts to reduce anesthetic morbidity in patients with good physical status, and to improve preanesthetic assessment and preparation of cardiovascular conditions in those with poor physical status.
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We report a case in which two fragments due to coring from the rubbercap of a 50 ml Diprivan vial were detected only immediately before infusion to a patient. The attending anesthesiologist noticed the foreign bodies by chance. ⋯ It is difficult to recognize the small fragments in Diprivan which is white unclear emulsion. Therefore, anesthesiologists should be aware of the danger of coring.
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Arthrogryposis multiplex congenita (AMC) is a syndrome with multiple persistent limb contractures, often accompanied by associated anomalies. Pediatric patients with AMC frequently require operations, necessitating general endotracheal anesthesia. ⋯ Both induction and maintenance were smooth, and no hyperthermia occurred perioperatively. Propofol can be safely used for anesthesia in AMC patients.
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Case Reports
[Usefulness of epidural infusion of ketamine for relief of localized superficial pain].
Three patients with localized superficial pain had their pain alleviated by single epidural infusion with low dose ketamine. The patients are as follows: a 62-year-old female with herpetic neuralgia on her right sixth thoracic nerve area; a 52-year-old male whose left shoulder, anterior chest and abdomen had been burned by acetylene gas; and a 49-year-old male whose bilateral hands suffering from frostbite by propane gas. ⋯ They were administered single epidural infusion of 10 mg ketamine with lidocaine or bupibacaine everyday and they continued to receive epidural block with lidocaine or bupivacaine including buprenorphine or morphine. Therefore, we suspect that single epidural infusion of ketamine, an antagonist for N-methyl-D-aspartic acid receptor, could be an effective and useful alternative treatment in patients with various refractory localized superficial pain of either acute or chronic nature.