| Literature DB >> 21179297 |
Sam Soon Cho1, Yong Duck Park, Jae Hoon Noh, Kyoung Oh Kang, Hee Jung Jun, Jin Sun Yoon.
Abstract
Methemoglobinemia is an uncommon but potentially fatal disorder. Most cases have no adverse clinical consequence and require no treatment, but methemoglobinemia is often overlooked as a cause of low oxygen saturation, and often mistaken for the more common causes of hypoxia by anesthesiologists despite simple bedside tests that indicate the presence of this treatable abnormality. We present a 68-year-old female patient who underwent gastrectomy for advanced gastric cancer with bleeding. In the preoperative period, the patient showed cyanosis and oxygen saturation was 85% by pulse oximeter, but oxygen saturation by arterial blood gas analysis was 100%. After tracheal intubation, the methemoglobin level was 18.3%. Ascorbic acid and methylene blue were administered. During preanesthetic evaluation, the patient had not informed the anesthesiologist that she had been taking dapsone.Entities:
Keywords: Dapsone; Methemoglobinemia; Oximetry
Year: 2010 PMID: 21179297 PMCID: PMC2998655 DOI: 10.4097/kjae.2010.59.5.340
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean J Anesthesiol ISSN: 2005-6419
Serial Arterial Blood Gas Analysis
AA: ascorbic acid, MB: methylene blue, SaO2: oxygen saturation by ABGA, SpO2: oxygen saturation by pulse oximeter, metHb: methemoglobin, O2Hb: oxyhemoglobin, FiO2: inspired oxygen fraction.