A 1-year old male patient with Williams syndrome and multiple prior interventions presented for surgical repair of his descending aorta (DA) through a left thoracotomy. Concerns for significant bleeding and spinal cord protection led the care team to consider a left heart bypass (LHB) circuit with options for pump sucker use, heat exchange capacity, and the possibility of converting to traditional cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). A traditional CPB circuit with a roller-head arterial pump was assembled with a bypass line around the cardiotomy venous reservoir (CVR).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecent advances in catheterization and imaging technology allow for more complex procedures to be performed in the catheterization laboratory. A number of lesions are now amenable to a percutaneous procedure, eliminating or at least postponing the need for a surgical intervention. Due to the increase in the complexity of the procedures performed, the involvement of anesthesiologists and their close collaboration with the interventional cardiologists have increased.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInduction of anesthesia can be a very stressful period for a child and his family and can be associated with increased risk of psychological disturbances. These disturbances are categorized as preoperative anxiety, emergence delirium and postoperative behavioral changes. Several tools have been developed to measure these psychological manifestations as well as the baseline personality traits of these patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRetrograde intubation is part of the difficult airway algorithm in the American Society of Anesthesiologists, but its usage is rare in small pediatric patients with the advent of new intubation techniques. We present our experience of retrograde intubation for a 4-month-old patient who presented for laryngeal cleft repair on cardiopulmonary bypass. This case highlights the unique place for retrograde intubation in small patients in the current era.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWorld J Pediatr Congenit Heart Surg
July 2011
Neonates and infants undergoing cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass are exposed to multiple blood products from different donors. The volume of the bypass circuit is often as large as the patient's total blood volume and asanguineous bypass primes are unusual. As a result, blood products are required for the cardiopulmonary bypass prime and are often used to treat the postbypass dilutional coagulopathy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhysiological disturbances induced by cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) and hypothermia during cardiac surgery are particularly pronounced in certain unique patient populations, such as patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) and cold agglutinin disease. Red blood cells containing hemoglobin S (HbS) are at increased risk of sickling under conditions encountered during cardiac surgery, leading to SCD-related complications such as vaso-occlusive events. While a target level of HbS has not been determined for patients with SCD undergoing CPB, a safe practice includes increasing the Hb level to 10 g/dL and reducing the proportion of HbS to approximately 30%.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To determine whether two vs 10 mL of saline injected into the epidural space affects the subsequent spread and quality of epidural analgesia in parturients.
Design: Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled study.
Setting: Delivery room.
In a prospective, randomized study, we investigated the incidence of successful insertion of laryngeal mask airway (LMA) at the first attempt and the incidence of side effects after LMA insertion using the combination of sevoflurane and propofol as compared with either sevoflurane or propofol alone for induction of anesthesia. Eighty-three unpremedicated ASA physical status I-II patients were anesthetized with a single vital capacity breath (VCB) of sevoflurane 8% supplemented with IV propofol 1.5 mg/kg, a single VCB of sevoflurane 8%, or IV propofol 3 mg/kg.
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