| Literature DB >> 20814556 |
Thorsten Brenner1, Johann Motsch, Jens Werner, Lars Grenacher, Eike Martin, Stefan Hofer.
Abstract
Metastatic liver resection following cytoreductive chemotherapy is an accepted treatment for oligometastatic tumor diseases. Although pulmonary complications are frequently reported in patients undergoing liver surgery including liver transplantation, life-threatening acute respiratory failures in the absence of aspiration, embolism, transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI), pulmonary infection, or an obvious source of systemic sepsis are rare. We performed an extensive clinical review of a patient undergoing metastatic liver resection who had a clinical course compatible to an acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) without an obvious cause except for the surgical procedure and multiple preoperative chemotherapies. We hypothesize that either the surgical procedure mediated by cytokines and tumor necrosis factor or possible toxic effects of oxygen applied during general anesthesia were associated with life-threatening respiratory failure in the patient. Discrete and subclinical inflammated alveoli (probably due to multiple preoperative chemotherapies with substances at potential risk for interstitial pneumonitis as well as chest radiation) might therefore be considered as risk factors.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20814556 PMCID: PMC2931399 DOI: 10.1155/2010/586425
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anesthesiol Res Pract ISSN: 1687-6962
Anamnesis.
| December 1994 | Diagnosis of breast cancer followed by a resection of the left breast |
| January 1995–June 1995 | Adjuvant chemotherapy (cyclophosphamide, metothrexate, 5-fluoruracil) |
| January 1995–June 2005 | Tamoxifen |
| June 2005 | Diagnosis and extirpation of a lymph node metastasis in the left supraclavicular area |
| July 2005–September 2005 | Radiation of the left supraclavicular area |
| December 2005 | Diagnosis of a metastasis in the ventral part of the mediastinum with an osteolytic destruction of the breastbone |
| January 2006–February 2006 | Radiation of the mediastinum |
| March 2006 | Diagnosis of a liver metastasis (S4a) |
| March 2006–July 2006 | Chemotherapy (trastuzumab, docetaxel) was followed by a complete remission of the metastasis |
| July 2006–October 2008 | Monotherapy with trastuzumab |
| October 2008 | Reappearance of the liver metastasis with a dimension increase |
| October 2008–March 2009 | Chemotherapeutics were escalated towards lapatinib and capecitabine |
| March 2009–August 2009 | Dimension decrease of the liver metastasis. Monotherapy with lapatinib due to capecitabine associated hemorrhagic diarrhea. |
| September 2009 | Left-sided hemihepatectomy followed by an ARDS |
The patient's concomitant diseases.
| Essential arterial hypertension |
| Combined aortic valve defect (stenosis > insufficiency) |
| Essential hyperlipoproteinemia |
| Rheumatoid Arthritis under corticosteroid treatment (5 mg prednisone/die) |
| Diabetes mellitus II (Insulin-dependent) |
| Nodular goiter (euthyroid) |
Figure 1Chest X-ray diagnostic in the patient from preoperative (Pre-OP) until closely to the patient's discharge from hospital at day 14. Pre-OP: preoperative; d: day; ap: anterior-posterior; lat: lateral.
Figure 2Coronary and axial cuts of the computed tomography of the chest immediately after the end of surgery before patient's admission to the intensive care unit. d: day.
Figure 3Coronary and axial cuts of the computed tomography of the chest at day 3 after onset of ARDS. d: day; ARDS: acute respiratory distress syndrome.
Disorders associated with the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS).
| Sepsis (most common) |
| Aspiration |
| Pneumonia (bacterial, viral, fungal, etc.) |
| Embolism (VTE, amniotic, tumor, etc.) |
| Hematologic (transfusion-related acute lung injury, TRALI) |
| Shock (any etiology) |
| Trauma |
| Acute pancreatitis |
| Drugs (amiodarone, tocolytics, salicylates, opiates, etc.) |
| Reperfusion injury (post-lung transplant, lung reexpansion) |
| Acute upper airway obstruction |
| Neurogenic pulmonary edema |
Figure 4Standard operating procedure (SOP) of the Department of Anesthesiology, University of Heidelberg, Germany, for the diagnosis and management of patients with suspected ARDS.