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Query: UMLS:C0024591 (malignant hyperthermia)
2,353 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Malignant hyperthermia (MH), triggered by anaesthesia, is a rare and potentially fatal condition. It requires immediate and specific treatment. This review focuses on anticipation and organisation of treatment. Anticipation means that dantrolene should be available, that an anaesthetic machine should be kept free from all vapours of halogenated anaesthetics, and methods of cooling should be planned. A prompt availability in all operating theatres of dantrolene and the required machines is emphasized. Treatment of a MH episode includes stopping the administration of triggering agents, administering dantrolene, correcting metabolic and respiratory acidosis, and cooling. Different aspects of the cardiovascular pharmacology of dantrolene are discussed. Other drugs are seldom required if proper treatment is started soon enough after the crisis. Complications may arise during a fulminant episode. They are difficult to treat, and may lead to sequelae. A rational approach to the treatment of hyperkalaemia, circulatory and renal failure is discussed. After the crisis, dantrolene should be continued for a short time. Finally, the nonspecific signs which can give the earliest diagnosis possible of MH are discussed: an early diagnosis and early treatment with dantrolene are essential in reducing the mortality of malignant hyperthermia.
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PMID:[Treatment of malignant hyperthermia crisis during anesthesia]. 269 57

The occurrence in a previously healthy infant of sudden febrile encephalopathy with shock and metabolic acidosis associated with liver and renal failure and bloody watery diarrhea has been reported by several authors in recent years. We report the same association in a 3 1/2 month-old infant. We discuss the similarities between this clinical picture and malignant hyperthermia and Reye syndrome.
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PMID:[Hemorrhagic shock syndrome with encephalopathy]. 357 85

The authors report a retrospective study of 11 cases of malignant hyperthermia. The mean age of the patients was 5 months and 3 weeks. Clinical features included severe hyperthermia (greater than 41 degrees C), seizures, coma, collapse, rhabdomyolysis, acute renal failure and functional renal failure. Three infants died. Four patients presented neurological damages. Four recovered fully. The authors discuss the difficulties of diagnosis, the nosological position and the pathophysiology of this syndrome.
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PMID:[Severe hyperthermia syndrome in the infant. Apropos of 11 cases]. 367 Oct 30

Following the administration of fluphenthixol (a depot phenothiazine) for a psychotic illness, a 44-year-old woman developed weakness, rhabdomyolysis and renal failure, together with hyperthermia (42 degrees C) and signs of both autonomic and central nervous system dysfunction. She died following massive intestinal haemorrhage, intra-abdominal sepsis and probable disseminated intravascular coagulation. A diagnosis of neuroleptic malignant syndrome had been made, but treatment with dantrolene sodium was probably instituted too late to prevent the progress of the complications she had developed. This syndrome, which follows the use of phenothiazines or butyrophenones, is rare, potentially fatal and probably underdiagnosed. It has been likened to malignant hyperthermia, but a review of the literature points to many differences. Both dantrolene sodium and dopaminergic drugs (bromocriptine, amantidine and L-dopa) have been shown to be efficacious and their continued use, despite a failure in this case, is advocated until more is known about this syndrome.
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PMID:The neuroleptic malignant syndrome. Case report with a review of the literature. 382 73

Ecstasy (3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine) is a popular recreational drug, a "designer drug", which has been developed from the basic structure in amphetamine. Ecstasy has now reached the illegal drug market in Denmark via the US, Great Britain and Sweden. The drug is related to a certain youth culture from which it is estimated that many drug abusers have been recruited. The desired effects of ecstasy, namely enhanced openness, awareness and empathy, have previously been used in various therapeutic connections. In later years the drug has led to abuse which, in connection with certain cultural behaviour patterns (for example in discotheques), can cause dangerous psychiatric as well as somatic effects. The undesirable psychiatric effects range from fear through depression to actual psychoses, and the somatic effects vary from symptoms of increased sympathetic activity to malignant hyperthermia, disseminated intravascular coagulation, rhabdomyolysis, renal failure, and lethal hepatotoxicity. The last mentioned symptoms occur in connection with prolonged physical activities such as exhausting dancing sessions. The article discusses the available treatments for conditions of abuse and stresses the need for prophylactic efforts in the form of information and awareness of the problem.
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PMID:[Abuse of Ecstasy (3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine). Pharmacological, neuropsychiatric and behavioral aspects]. 770 30

Malignant hyperpyrexia is an inherited disorder of skeletal muscle characterized by intermittent hypermetabolic crises, usually triggered by anaesthetic agents. We present the case of a 19-year-old man who developed acute renal failure following an apparently uneventful general anaesthetic for appendicectomy. His renal failure was found to be secondary to rhabdomyolysis, and he made a full recovery after requiring haemodialysis for 14 days. Both the patient and his father were later discovered to have an underlying metabolic susceptibility to malignant hyperpyrexia. We propose that an undetected hypermetabolic crisis precipitated rhabdomyolysis and subsequent acute renal failure in this patient.
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PMID:Rhabdomyolysis and acute renal failure in unsuspected malignant hyperpyrexia. 810 43

Cystinosis is a rare autosomal recessive inherited disorder of amino acid metabolism. Little is known of the affects of general anaesthesia on the disease (Tobias 1993) and complications relating to anaesthesia have not been previously reported. Infantile cystinosis presents as progressive renal failure and the Fanconi syndrome and metabolic bone disease often develop. We describe the case of a child who presented with signs of apparent malignant hyperthermia (MH) under general anaesthesia and was treated with dantrolene. During a repeat 'trigger-free' general anaesthetic he developed a fever which responded to paracetamol. The metabolic effects of cystinosis and its similarity to MH will be discussed.
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PMID:Intraoperative hyperthermia in a paediatric patient with cystinosis. 859 74

Rhabdomyolysis occurred in two apparently healthy boys aged 9.5 and 5.5 years after general anesthesia with suxamethonium. Mild hyperkalemia and renal failure were observed in the first patient, who was subsequently diagnosed with Becker dystrophy. In the second patient, the clinical presentation was not classic for malignant hyperthermia and a muscle biopsy failed to disclose any pathological finding. A review of the literature revealed 66 pediatric cases (56 boys and 10 girls) of anesthesia-associated rhabdomyolysis. Forty-nine (74%) cases were caused by an underlying, mostly unrecognized congenital muscle disease, and 14 (21%) cases were caused by malignant hyperthermia susceptibility. Hyperkalemia (23 patients), cardiac arrhythmias (38 patients), renal failure (4 patients), and death (11 patients) were the most serious complications of anesthesia-associated rhabdomyolysis. The neuromuscular blocking agent suxamethonium had been used in at least 43 of the patients reported in the literature.
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PMID:Rhabdomyolysis and anesthesia: a report of two cases and review of the literature. 891 67

Malignant hyperthermia (MH) is a rare inherited disorder of skeletal muscle, its inheritance being autosomal dominant and its mutant gene located on chromosome 19. MH is occasionally observed during general anesthesia when using some special triggering agents. In the susceptible patient, it presents with a fulminant skeletal muscle hypermetabolic crisis and proceeds to serve rhabdomyolysis. Once rhabdomyolysis is established, acute renal failure is not an inevitable consequence, yet it is the fatal complication if the condition is not appropriately managed. We describe a case of acute renal failure in the setting of rhabdomyolysis in unsuspected MH, resulting in full recovery after intermittent hemodialysis. In this case, we emphasize the importance of early recognition of MH and the favorable prognosis of subsequent myoglobinuric renal failure if treated appropriately.
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PMID:Early recognition of unsuspected malignant hyperthermia and successful management of serve myoglobinuric renal failure in subsequent rhabdomyolysis: a case report. 972 58

Rhabdomyolysis is a relatively common condition that may occur intermittently in chronic and inflammatory myopathy, muscular dystrophy, and metabolic myopathy. Rhabdomyolysis can also present acutely in otherwise healthy individuals. The list of etiologies for acute muscle cell lysis is enormous, with new causes described yearly. Series on acute pediatric rhabdomyolysis have not yet been published. This article describes a retrospective review of children admitted to the authors' institution during an 8-year period in whom rhabdomyolysis was recognized as a complication during their hospital stay. Patients with intermittent or relapsing rhabdomyolysis were excluded. Nineteen children were identified. Trauma (five cases), nonketotic hyperosmolar coma (two cases), viral myositis (two cases), dystonia (two cases), and malignant hyperthermia-related conditions (two cases) were the most common causes of rhabdomyolysis. Acute renal failure was the most frequent complication, occurring in 42% of cases. The mean age of renal failure patients was 13.9 years, compared to 8 years for non-renal failure children. Careful assessment of the initial urinalysis would have suggested a diagnosis of rhabdomyolysis in 9 of 16 patients tested.
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PMID:Acute pediatric rhabdomyolysis. 1080 87


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