Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0037315 (sleep apnea)
8,000 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 33-year-old male was scheduled for tonsillectomy and pharyngoplasty due to sleep apnea syndrome. The intubation was uneventful following induction with thiamylal and vecuronium. Anesthesia was maintained with O2-N2O-sevoflurane. No complications were observed during the 90 min operation. After the termination of the anesthesia, a hyperadrenergic state was observed: arterial pressure and heart rate rose to 230/135 mmHg and 135 bpm, respectively. Immediately after extubation, he developed dyspnea with tracheal tag and stridor, and became cyanotic despite the use of a simple oxygen mask and assisted ventilation. Laryngospasm was suspected. The patient was reintubated and suctioned; pink, frothy sputum was not obtained. Arterial blood gases 5 minutes after reintubation revealed a pH of 7.24, Pao2 86 mmHg (FIo2 1.0), and Paco2 54 mmHg. Chest X-ray 30 minutes after reintubation revealed bilateral diffuse alveolar infiltration. The diagnosis was interstitial pulmonary edema. The patient was ventilated mechanically by applying a positive end-expiratory pressure of 5cm H2O, and furosemide and dopamine were administered intravenously. The patient was extubated the next day, and discharged from hospital ten days later. We considered that the lung edema was induced by the severe negative pressure generated by inspirating against a closed upper airway, as well as by the hyperadrenergic state and severe hypoxemia observed during and after extubation.
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PMID:[Pulmonary edema due to acute airway obstruction immediately after tracheal extubation]. 985 97

The authors report the case of a patient suffering from central sleep apnea (CSA) who underwent neurosurgery for ventriculo-peritoneal derivation under general anesthesia. Given the risk of postoperative hypoventilation in CSA, intraoperative anesthesia was induced using remifentanyl, an opiate with a plasma half-life of less than 5 minutes. Propofol (2 mg/kg) and remifentanyl at a dose of 0.5 microgram/kg was used during induction. The patient was curarised with vecuronium bromide, intubated and ventilated with a mixture of O2/N2O. During the operation, remifentanyl was administered as a continuous infusion at a starting dose of 0.2 microgram/kg/min, subsequently modified according to changes in arterial pressure and heart rate. At the end of surgery, which lasted approximately 120", decurarisation was carried out using prostigmin, and the infusion of remifentanyl was suspended, together with N2O. Reawakening times were recorded. Extubation took place 8' and 30" after the suspension of remifentanyl. Postoperative monitoring of SpO2 continued for 1 h and blood-gas analysis was satisfactory. No hypoventilation episodes were reported throughout the postoperative period and the patient was discharged from hospital after 7 days. The authors consider that remifentanyl should be the drug of choice to guarantee intraoperative analgesia in patients suffering from CSA requiring general anesthesia.
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PMID:[General anesthesia with remifentanil in a case of "sleep apnea syndrome"]. 1052 30