| Literature DB >> 23762044 |
Adrian Langley1, Charles T Dameron.
Abstract
Recent research has implicated abnormal copper homeostasis in the underlying pathophysiology of several clinically important disorders, some of which may be encountered by the anesthetist in daily clinical practice. The purpose of this narrative review is to summarize the physiology and pharmacology of copper, the clinical implications of abnormal copper metabolism, and the subsequent influence of altered copper homeostasis on anesthetic management.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23762044 PMCID: PMC3666360 DOI: 10.1155/2013/750901
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anesthesiol Res Pract ISSN: 1687-6962
Figure 1Schematic overview of the major pathways of copper homeostasis. Cu = Copper; CTR1 = Copper Transport Protein 1; ATP7A = Copper transporting ATPase. Mutation is associated with Menkes disease. Encoded by the gene ATP7A; ATP7B = Copper transporting ATPase. Mutation is associated with Wilson's disease. Encoded by the gene ATP7B; Copper transport proteins include fatty acids, albumin, macroglobulin, histidine, and ceruloplasmin. Disruption to copper uptake (Menkes) and excretion (Wilson's) pathways represented by ∖∖.
Summary of the major anesthetic considerations in the management of patients with Menkes and Wilson's diseases. [47–51].
| Condition | Anesthetic considerations | Anesthetic management |
|---|---|---|
| Menkes disease | Seizures | Preoperatively: Continue anticonvulsant regimen. Check levels. |
| Gastroesophageal reflux | Consider prophylaxis and endotracheal intubation. | |
| Difficult intravenous cannulation | Use ultrasound for central intravenous access for placement and to identify vascular abnormalities. | |
| Capillary fragility | Consider group and hold with cross match where clinically indicated. | |
| Hypothermia | Use warmed intravenous fluids, theatre temperature regulation, forced air warmers, and humidification of inspired gases. | |
| Neuraxial anesthesia | Relatively contraindicated due to risk of bleeding from vessel fragility. | |
| Muscle relaxation | May not be necessary under deep volatile anesthesia because of hypotonia. | |
| Opioid related respiratory depression | Multimodal nonopioid analgesics and careful local anesthesia by wound infiltration. | |
| Post operative analgesia | Risk of bleeding or hematoma formation with intramuscular or subcutaneous routes. | |
|
| ||
| Wilson's disease | Neurological and psychiatric | Delayed metabolism of hypnotic sedative drugs may exacerbate neurological or psychiatric postoperatively. |
| Hepatic | Impaired metabolism and elimination of anaesthetic agents and morphine. | |
| Regional or neuraxial anesthesia | Acceptable in absence or significant coagulopathy (INR > 1.4) or thrombocytopenia (platelets < 100,000 mm−3). | |
| Cardiovascular | ECG or echocardiography if coronary artery disease or cardiomyopathy suspected. | |
| Renal | Fluid and electrolyte abnormalities common. Severe liver dysfunction may result in hepatorenal syndrome which may require dialysis perioperatively. | |
| Muscular | Avoid or reduce dosage of nondepolarizing neuromuscular blockers (NDMB). | |