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- May 3, 2004
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Anybody ever seen this? I seem to always get the weird anesthesia reactions that never happen to anyone else.
I was doing moderate sedation on this lady in her 60s, ASA 3, s/p total left shoulder about 1.5 months ago and the orthopod sent her in after doing an XR in the office that showed prosthetic dislocation. I do all my usual pre-sedation assessment, get everything ready, yada yada. All my back up stuff in the room, ortho talks rads into rolling a c-arm down from the OR and we're ready. I push about 50-75mg prop and the lady starts having these really intense, rhythmic myoclonic jerking over her entire body. Facial muscles, arms, legs, torso, abdomen. I can tell from the ETCO2 monitor that it's actually impairing her ability to take a deep breath. The entire facial muscles were also involved. Each rhythmic contraction was about 2 per second and it lasted a full 2 minutes. I pried one of her eyes open and there wasn't any gaze deviation and it didn't appear to resemble any traditional seizure activity. I immediately cancelled the procedure and told the orthopods that I was sorry but she was having atypical myoclonic activity that I wasn't sure if it was d/t the propofol or some other neurologic syndrome and recommended a full anesthesia consult and reduction in a more controlled setting (OR) and that she would probably need GA. I didn't want to risk pushing more prop and having a more sustained reaction especially given the respiratory compromise. I never had to bag her.
I actually had an anesthesiologist patient last night and ran the case by him and he said he had heard of it before but never experienced it but had colleagues who had. I tried doing a pubmed search and get scattered case reports. It seems like a rare reaction. It was my first time encountering it. Weird.
I was doing moderate sedation on this lady in her 60s, ASA 3, s/p total left shoulder about 1.5 months ago and the orthopod sent her in after doing an XR in the office that showed prosthetic dislocation. I do all my usual pre-sedation assessment, get everything ready, yada yada. All my back up stuff in the room, ortho talks rads into rolling a c-arm down from the OR and we're ready. I push about 50-75mg prop and the lady starts having these really intense, rhythmic myoclonic jerking over her entire body. Facial muscles, arms, legs, torso, abdomen. I can tell from the ETCO2 monitor that it's actually impairing her ability to take a deep breath. The entire facial muscles were also involved. Each rhythmic contraction was about 2 per second and it lasted a full 2 minutes. I pried one of her eyes open and there wasn't any gaze deviation and it didn't appear to resemble any traditional seizure activity. I immediately cancelled the procedure and told the orthopods that I was sorry but she was having atypical myoclonic activity that I wasn't sure if it was d/t the propofol or some other neurologic syndrome and recommended a full anesthesia consult and reduction in a more controlled setting (OR) and that she would probably need GA. I didn't want to risk pushing more prop and having a more sustained reaction especially given the respiratory compromise. I never had to bag her.
I actually had an anesthesiologist patient last night and ran the case by him and he said he had heard of it before but never experienced it but had colleagues who had. I tried doing a pubmed search and get scattered case reports. It seems like a rare reaction. It was my first time encountering it. Weird.
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