Anesthetic considerations in patients with mitochondrial defects.

Paediatr Anaesth

Department of Pediatric Anesthesiology, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH, USA.

Published: September 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Mitochondrial disease is increasingly recognized as a significant cause of various disorders affecting the nervous system, heart, muscles, and hormones, with an incidence similar to other well-known neurological diseases.
  • High-energy tissues are particularly vulnerable to mitochondrial dysfunction, leading to symptoms such as seizures, heart issues, and muscle weakness.
  • As understanding and treatment of mitochondrial diseases improve, patients often require surgeries and diagnostic tests that involve anesthesia, prompting concerns about potential complications from metabolic stress and pain management.

Article Abstract

Mitochondrial disease, once thought to be a rare clinical entity, is now recognized as an important cause of a wide range of neurologic, cardiac, muscle, and endocrine disorders . The incidence of disorders of the respiratory chain alone is estimated to be about 1 per 4-5000 live births, similar to that of more well-known neurologic diseases . High-energy requiring tissues are uniquely dependent on the energy delivered by mitochondria and therefore have the lowest threshold for displaying symptoms of mitochondrial disease. Thus, mitochondrial dysfunction most commonly affects function of the central nervous system, the heart and the muscular system . Mutations in mitochondrial proteins cause striking clinical features in those tissues types, including encephalopathies, seizures, cerebellar ataxias, cardiomyopathies, myopathies, as well as gastrointestinal and hepatic disease. Our knowledge of the contribution of mitochondria in causing disease or influencing aging is expanding rapidly . As diagnosis and treatment improve for children with mitochondrial diseases, it has become increasingly common for them to undergo surgeries for their long-term care. In addition, often a muscle biopsy or other tests needing anesthesia are required for diagnosis. Mitochondrial disease represents probably hundreds of different defects, both genetic and environmental in origin, and is thus difficult to characterize. The specter of possible delayed complications in patients caused by inhibition of metabolism by anesthetics, by remaining in a biochemically stressed state such as fasting/catabolism, or by prolonged exposure to pain is a constant worry to physicians caring for these patients. Here, we review the considerations when caring for a patient with mitochondrial disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3711963PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/pan.12158DOI Listing

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