Cases reported "Uterine Prolapse"

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1/3. Sprengels deformity: anaesthesia management.

    A 28 years old lady presented with Sprengels deformity and hemivertebrae for Fothergills surgery. Clinically there were no anomalies of the nervous, renal or the cardiovascular systems. She had a short neck and score on modified Mallapati test was grade 2. She was successfully anaesthetised using injection propofol as a total intravenous anaesthetic agent after adequate premedication with injection midazolam and injection pentazocine. Patient had an uneventful intraoperative and postoperative course.
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keywords = anaesthesia
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2/3. Anaesthetic considerations in Kartagener's syndrome -- a case report.

    Kartagener's syndrome is a rare disorder characterized by the triad of situs inversus, including dextrocardia, bronchiectasis and paranasal sinusitis. We report the anaesthetic management of a patient with Kartagener's syndrome and postrenal transplant immunosuppression, presenting for repair of uterovaginal prolapse. Combined spinal epidural anaesthesia was administered to this patient. The anaesthetic considerations of this rare disorder and the relative advantages of the regional technique over general anaesthesia in this situation are discussed.
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keywords = anaesthesia
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3/3. Unexpected neurological deficits following recovery from anaesthesia.

    Two cases of neurological dysfunction are presented. Neurological deficits after recovery from anaesthesia are unusual in young women perioperatively. In the first case, a 39-yr-old woman presented at 36-wk gestation with antepartum haemorrhage and in labour. pregnancy had been complicated by pre-eclampsia and she underwent emergency Caesarean section under general anaesthesia without complication. The trachea was extubated when she was awake but almost immediately she became hypertensive, obtunded and reintubation was required. Her pupils became fixed and dilated but the Computerised Axial Tomogram (CT) was normal. A coagulopathy was evident. She made a full neurological recovery within 24 hr. On the same day, a previously healthy 41-yr-old woman who had undergone uneventful surgery for uterine prolapse 24 hr previously developed headache, nausea and over the next four hours signs of progressive brainstem ischaemia. The CT scan showed oedema of the mid- and hindbrain. Brainstem death was confirmed 12 hr later and the post-mortem revealed acute dissection of the vertebral artery secondary to cystic medial necrosis. Such dramatic neurological sequelae are rare but the importance of identifying "at risk" groups is underlined as is early recognition of neurological injury postoperatively.
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ranking = 1.5
keywords = anaesthesia
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