Cases reported "Cardiac Output, Low"

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1/42. Anaesthetic considerations in a patient with lepromatous leprosy.

    PURPOSE: To consider the anaesthetic problems in a patient with lepromatous leprosy undergoing general anaesthesia. CLINICAL FEATURES: A 52 yr old man with lepromatous leprosy for five years was booked for elective radical nephrectomy. He received 100 mg dapsone per day po. The patient was asymptomatic for cardiovascular disease but his electrocardiogram showed complete left bundle branch block, inferior wall ischaemia with echocardiogram findings of 58% ejection fraction and left ventricular diastolic dysfunction. Other preoperative investigations (haemogram, serum urea and creatinine, liver function tests and chest X-ray) were normal. After premedication with diazepam, meperidine and promethazine, the patient received glycopyrrolate and anaesthesia was induced with thiopentone. atracurium was given to facilitate tracheal intubation. Anaesthesia was maintained with intermittent positive pressure ventilation using N2O in oxygen with halothane. Anaesthesia and surgery were uneventful except that the patient had a fixed heart rate that remained unchanged in response to administration of anticholinergic, laryngoscopy, intubation and extubation. CONCLUSION: patients with lepromatous leprosy may have cardiovascular dysautonomia even when they are asymptomatic for cardiovascular disease.
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2/42. cesarean section in a mother with uncorrected congenital coronary to pulmonary artery fistula.

    PURPOSE: We report a case of a 33 yr old woman with pulmonary hypertension secondary to uncorrected right coronary artery to pulmonary artery fistula who underwent two successful operative deliveries under general anesthesia. CLINICAL FEATURES: This woman underwent an emergency Caesarean section at 32 wk gestation because she presented in NYHA Class IV, heart failure and premature labour. She did not have antenatal follow-up. For her second pregnancy, she was managed from the first trimester of pregnancy by the cardiologist, obstetrician and anesthesiologist. She received oral furosemide and digoxin from eight weeks gestation. pregnancy was managed to term before she progressed to NYHA Class IV and cardiac failure at 37 wk gestation. She had a Caesarean section under general anesthesia. She received rapid sequence induction of anesthesia and tracheal intubation with 0.1 mg x kg(-1) etomidate, 2 mg x kg(-1) succinylcholine and maintenance with nitrous oxide 50% in oxygen, isoflurane 1% and 0.1 mg x kg(-1) vecuronium. fentanyl, 2 microg x kg(-1) helped to obtund the hypertensive response to intubation. analgesia was provided with 1 mg x kg(-1) morphine. Glyceryl trinitrate infusion, 10-30 microg x min(-1) was used in addition to the anti-heart failure therapy. End-tidal capnography, electrocardiogram, pulse oximetry, continuous arterial blood pressure and pulmonary arterial catheter provided hemodynamic monitoring. The lungs were mechanically ventilated for 24 hr postoperatively. She received anti-heart failure therapy which she continued after discharge. She was NYHA class II upon discharge. She defaulted from further follow-up. CONCLUSION: Although the literature advocates, in this situation, controlled vaginal delivery utilising epidural analgesia, we describe the successful outcome for operative delivery under general anesthesia in a patient with secondary pulmonary hypertension and heart failure.
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3/42. Combined lung and liver transplantation in a girl with cystic fibrosis.

    PURPOSE: To describe the anesthetic considerations of a combined lung and liver transplant in a 14-yr-old girl with cystic fibrosis. CLINICAL FEATURES: A 14 yr-old girl with cystic fibrosis presented for combined liver and lung transplantation. Anesthetic management was complex in that the pulmonary, hemodynamic, and hematological changes after cardiopulmonary bypass and lung transplantation made the management of the subsequent liver transplant unique. We used a moderate dose fentanyl and isoflurane anesthetic with invasive monitoring including a pulmonary artery catheter. Upon reperfusion of the new liver our patient exhibited severe pulmonary hypertension that was associated with a decrease in cardiac output and systemic hypotension. Utilizing a pulmonary artery catheter, this episode was treated with an increase of prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) infusion to 0.025 microg x kg(-1) x min(-1) and the initiation of 3 microg x kg(-1) x min(-1) dobutamine. The pulmonary hypertension resolved and the cardiac output and blood pressure returned to baseline levels. CONCLUSION: The anesthetic considerations for a combined lung and liver transplant are complex because of the interactions and alterations in cardiovascular, pulmonary and hemostatic systems. The use of a pulmonary artery catheter was critical to the management of our patient because it allowed us to accurately treat an episode of hypotension occurring during liver transplantation. This episode was secondary to acute pulmonary hypertension which is common after pulmonary transplantation but unusual during liver transplantation. It is also critical that a team approach is used to consider all of the concerns of the multiple services managing these complex patients.
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4/42. Purulent pericarditis presenting as an extracardiac mass in a patient with untreated diabetes.

    A 50-year-old man with symptoms of bi-ventricular heart failure was transferred to our hospital with a diagnosis of extracardiac tumor. He had a 10 year history of untreated diabetes. Chest computed tomography (CT) revealed an extracardiac mass in the right atrio-ventricular groove. cardiac catheterization revealed an elevated mean right atrial pressure of 18 mmHg, mean pulmonary wedge pressure of 16 mmHg, and the right ventricular pressure curve demonstrated typical dips and plateaus. At surgery, there was severe adhesion between the pericardium and epicardium, and the pericardium was severely thickened and contained turbid pus. In the left thoracic cavity, there was large amount of pleural effusion and pus. Therefore, the patient was diagnosed with purulent pericarditis caused by left empyema. The thickened pericardium at the anterior portion of the heart was resected, however resection of the remaining portion was abandoned because the adhesion was so tight. After surgery, the patient underwent irrigation of the heart and left thoracic cavity by 1% povidone iodine solution and 0.5 mg/ml of imipenem for 7 days. Bacteriologic culture of the pus from the pericardium revealed anaerobic gram negative bacteria. After 4 months of antibiotics infusion, his C reactive protein became negative and the patient was subsequently discharged from our hospital.
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5/42. Biventricular pacing and atrioventricular junction ablation as treatment of low output syndrome due to refractory congestive heart failure and chronic atrial fibrillation.

    A 71-year-old male patient with end-stage heart failure, atrial fibrillation, congestive and low output symptoms, underwent biventricular pacing and atrioventricular junction ablation while anuric and hypotensive. Following atrioventricular junction ablation blood pressure increased by 20 mmHg during biventricular but not during right ventricular apical pacing. A rapid clinical improvement was observed and the patient was discharged from the hospital in NYHA functional class III.
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6/42. life-threatening cardiac failure in a healthy young female with Irukandji syndrome.

    We present a case of a previously well 24-year-old female patient who developed severe and life-threatening Irukandji syndrome that required ventilation and inotropic support. This case provides further evidence that there are jellyfish other than the Irukandji jellyfish that can cause cardiac decompensation, and there is a suggestion that application of a pressure immobilization bandage may worsen the envenomation. We include our recommended treatment for the Irukandji syndrome.
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7/42. Novel technique to repair type A acute aortic dissection in patients with a left ventricular assist device.

    Acute type A aortic dissection is an uncommon complication with left ventricular assist device insertion, but is often fatal even if successfully repaired with conventional techniques including aortic valve repair. Residual aortic insufficiency is common because this valve is now subjected to systolic pressure. We present a novel technique for the repair of type A acute aortic dissection in patients with a left ventricular assist device with no chance of residual aortic insufficiency.
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8/42. Cardiac failure and multiple organ dysfunction syndrome in a patient with endocrine adenomatosis.

    In this case report, we present the successful therapy of severe cardiac failure in pituitary adrenal insufficiency. A previously healthy 56-year-old-man in pituitary coma due to an atypical variant of multiple endocrine adenomatosis (pituitary adenoma and pheochromocytoma) suffered from cardiac failure resistant to catecholamine and standard hydrocortisone therapy. After two bolus injections of dexamethasone (2 x 24 mg) mean arterial pressure and cardiac function dramatically improved, probably due to restoration of permissive effects on catecholamine action and reversal of pathophysiological mechanisms of cardiac failure. We conclude that in patients with severe cardiovascular failure in pituitary coma the administration of potent glucocorticoids may be more effective in reversing cardiovascular failure than standard dosages of hydrocortisone.
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9/42. Cardiac rescue with enoximone in volume and catecholamine refractory septic shock.

    In December 2000 and February 2001, two children with suspected meningococcal disease were admitted to our pediatric intensive unit. Their Glasgow Meningococcal Septicaemia Prognostic score was 12 points. General treatment including antibiotics, steroids in case of meningitis, and fluid replacement, was performed. Despite appropriate volume replacement, intubation and ventilation, noradrenaline and adrenaline continuous infusions < or =1.0 microg/kg/min, and additional bolus infusions, cardiac output deteriorated within minutes in both children. calcium and bicarbonate were given without sustained effect. echocardiography demonstrated no pericardial effusion and shortening fraction was <10%. External cardiac massage had to be performed immediately in one case for electromechanical uncoupling. Both patients received a bolus of enoximone 2 mg/kg and 5 mg/kg body weight, respectively, followed by a continuous infusion of 20-23 microg/kg/min. Thereafter, both children had an adequate blood pressure and their shortening fraction increased to >30%. Within minutes, the catecholamine infusion could be reduced in both patients. The children completely recovered from their life-threatening situations. In patients with severe prolonged catecholamine and volume refractory endotoxin shock in waterhouse-friderichsen syndrome, even with electromechanical uncoupling and complete myocardial arrest, enoximone can immediately restore myocardial contractility.
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10/42. Successful cardiac resynchronization therapy in a 9-year-old boy with dilated cardiomyopathy.

    Despite increasing clinical impact of cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) with av-synchronous biventricular pacing in adults with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCMP), an ejection fraction (EF) of less than 35% and left bundle branch block (LBBB), there is still only little experience in children. We report on a 9-year-old boy with histologically proven DCMP and LBBB who had fulfilled the criteria for heart transplantation (HTX) after cardiac decompensation including catecholamine therapy. A transvenous CRT pacing system was implanted without technical difficulties. The healing process was uneventful. With optimized AV-interval invasive evaluation during implantation indicated a 16% pulse pressure increase and a 63% augmentation of LV dp/dt by pacing the LV 20 ms prior to the RV. Tissue Doppler imaging demonstrated complete LV resynchronization. Physical capacity increased and HTX could be delayed.
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