A & A case reports
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A fiberoptic examination is recommended at the end of lung transplantation for bronchial toilet and to check the bronchial anastomoses. This procedure permitted detection of a 10 × 4-mm piece of plastic of unknown origin in the left lingular bronchus and suggests that bronchoscopy should be performed before implanting the transplanted lung.
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After standard hip arthroplasty, an 82-year-old patient with previously undiagnosed diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis of the cervical spine experienced life-threatening side effects after use of a supraglottic airway device (i-gel). Extensive mucosal erosion and denudation of the cricoid cartilage caused postoperative supraglottic swelling and prolonged respiratory failure requiring tracheostomy. In this case report, we highlight the importance of evaluating risk factors for failure of supraglottic airway devices.
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We describe a case of extensive soft palate ulceration after the use of an i-gel supraglottic airway device (Intersurgical Ltd, Wokingham, United Kingdom) during a knee arthroscopy in a 61-year-old man. He presented with pain and soft palate ulceration, which eventually required hospital admission because of dehydration. The pharynx healed completely within 3 months, with a change in taste as the remaining symptom.
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Persistent postsurgical pain after amputation is common and has a number of proposed risk factors. We describe the management of a patient with persistent pain after a below-the-knee amputation. We used a combination of general, peripheral, and neuraxial anesthesia techniques to control postoperative phantom limb and stump pain in a patient at high risk for developing chronic pain. With preemptive management and mechanism-directed therapies, adequate preoperative and postoperative pain control were achieved in attempts to reduce the risk of chronic phantom limb pain.