Publications by authors named "Roland Brusseau"

Background: FAV is offered to fetuses with severe aortic valve stenosis and evolving hypoplastic left heart syndrome. An inferential analysis of TS and SAE in a large series has not been reported.

Objectives: The purpose of this study was to determine factors associated with fetal aortic valvuloplasty (FAV) technical success (TS) and serious adverse events (SAEs).

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Objective: Peripheral regional anesthesia is proposed to enhance recovery. We sought to evaluate the efficacy of bilateral continuous erector spinae plane blocks (B-ESpB) for postoperative analgesia and the impact on recovery in children undergoing cardiac surgery.

Methods: Patients aged 2 through 17 years undergoing cardiac surgery in the enhanced recovery after cardiac surgery program were prospectively enrolled to receive B-ESpB at the end of the procedure, with continuous infusions via catheters postoperatively.

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This article will narrow its focus largely to notable issues related to regional anesthesia in pediatrics. First, the controversy surrounding awake versus anesthetized block placement will be addressed. There will also be a discussion on the use of regional anesthetics in orthopedics cases and the risk of compartment syndrome.

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Background: Epidural analgesia is commonly used for pain control after reconstructive hip surgery, but its use is controversial in the presence of an intrathecal baclofen pump (ITB). The purpose of this retrospective study was to investigate the rate of serious anesthetic and postoperative complications as well as the efficacy of epidural analgesia compared with lumbar plexus blocks (LPBs) for pain management after neuromuscular hip reconstruction in children with cerebral palsy (CP) and ITB.

Methods: Pediatric patients with CP and ITB undergoing hip reconstructive surgery from 2010 to 2019 were retrospectively identified.

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Objective: The present study examined the feasibility and efficacy of continuous bilateral erector spinae blocks for post-sternotomy pain in pediatric cardiac surgery.

Design: Prospective cohort study; patients were retrospectively matched 1:2 to control patients. Conditional logistic regression was used to compare dichotomous outcomes, and generalized linear models were used for continuous measures, both accounting for clusters.

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Article Synopsis
  • Children with cerebral palsy and intrathecal baclofen pumps often need hip reconstruction surgery, but the pumps can complicate anesthesia choices due to potential damage concerns.
  • This study evaluated the safety of using epidural anesthesia in these complex cases and found that no major complications occurred in a retrospective review of 16 children who received epidurals during surgery.
  • A coordinated approach involving multiple medical teams ensured the safety of the procedure, with effective monitoring of the baclofen pump post-surgery, and the majority of epidurals were confirmed via fluoroscopy.
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Anesthesia provision for fetal intervention differs from most other anesthetic situations insofar as anesthesiologists must care for 2 or more patients-each with potentially conflicting requirements. The first is the mother who can readily indicate discomforts, can be monitored directly, and to whom drugs may be administered directly and easily. For the fetus (or fetuses), nociception must be assumed or inferred indirectly, monitoring is limited at best, and drug administration is complicated and often indirect.

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The general principles that guide a pediatric anesthesiologist in the care of a newborn needing urgent and emergent neonatal surgery are reviewed. These include careful evaluation and assessment of the newborn including a detailed prenatal history. A brief review of neonatal physiology including the development of the autonomic nervous system and the development of nociceptive pathways is discussed and how important it is to suppress the stress response to surgical intervention in order to improve surgical outcomes.

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Background: Prenatal intervention for fetuses with pulmonary atresia with an intact ventricular septum (PA/IVS) has the potential to alter right heart physiologic features in utero, facilitating right heart growth and improving the prospect of a biventricular outcome after birth.

Methods: Since 2002, we have considered prenatal intervention for fetal PA/IVS in patients with (1) membranous pulmonary atresia, with identifiable pulmonary valve (PV) leaflets or membrane; (2) an intact or highly restrictive ventricular septum; and (3) right heart hypoplasia, with a tricuspid valve annulus z score of -2 or below and an identifiable but small right ventricle. Intervention was performed through direct cardiac puncture under ultrasound guidance, with percutaneous access or access through a limited laparotomy.

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