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Case Reports
. 2005 Oct;54(10):1146-8.

[Bronchospasm during anesthesia in a patient with Pena-Shokeir syndrome]

[Article in Japanese]
Affiliations
  • PMID: 16231771
Case Reports

[Bronchospasm during anesthesia in a patient with Pena-Shokeir syndrome]

[Article in Japanese]
Akiyo Nakamura et al. Masui. 2005 Oct.

Abstract

A 3-month-old boy with Pena-Shokeir syndrome underwent tracheotomy under general anesthesia. Patients with this syndrome may present anesthetic problems involving difficulties in tracheal intubation, possibilities of malignant hyperthermia, as well as perioperative respiratory complications related to hypoplasia of the lung. General anesthesia was induced and maintained with sevoflurane (2-3%) and nitrous oxide (0-50%) in oxygen (50-100%). The patient developed bronchospasm during tracheotomy. Atropine and epinephrine were administered intravenously and 5% sevoflurane was inhaled. The bronchospasm was improved gradually and surgery was successfully finished. Pena-Shokeir syndrome is an uncommon disease first reported by Pena & Shokeir in 1974 and characterized by congenital multiple arthrogryposis, characteristic facies, camptodactyly and pulmonary hypoplasia. In the perioperative management for a patient with Pena-Shokeir syndrome, special attention should be paid to abnormalities in the upper and lower respiratory systems, especially bronchospasm.

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