| Literature DB >> 25780466 |
Cheryl Wang1, Robert Richmond2, Enas Eldesouki2.
Abstract
Paragangliomas account for 15-20% of pheochromocytomas derived from chromaffin cells and secretes catecholamines. It has a high mortality rate due to hypertension and challenging anesthetic management. The present report is of a case of the successful management of paraganglioma resection with unexpected aortic resection. The patient presented for paraganglioma resection. The blood pressure (BP) was well controlled with α blockade followed by β blockade prior to surgery. The patient was under general anesthesia, with multiple intravenous lines, catheters and an arterial line. Induction was achieved by the administration of narcotic and volatile agents. During the procedure, the aorta was found to require resection in order to complete the tumor resection. The BP changed markedly with clamping and unclamping, tumor vein ligation and tumor resection. The increased BP due to catecholamine release and unclamping was controlled with phentolamine, nitroprusside, esmolol and labetolol. Drops in BP due to tumor vein ligation and clamping were managed with norepinephrine and vasopressin. With close communication and monitoring, the surgery on the patient was successfully completed and the patient was discharged days later in a hemodynamically stable condition. The diagnosis was further confirmed by pathology. This was a challenging case of paraganglioma resection with unexpected aortic resection. The success achieved suggests that the resection of paraganglioma and an aortic segment requires delicate anesthetic management. The key are α blockade and β blockade as necessary to control BP pre-operatively, frequent communication between the anesthesiologist and surgeons, intra-operative intervention in excess catecholamine release with phentolamine, nitroprusside and labetalol prior to tumor removal, and vasopressin for catecholamine deficiency when clamping or subsequent to tumor removal. It is a delicately orchestrated process requiring team work.Entities:
Keywords: anesthesia; case report; para-aortic paraganglioma; resection
Year: 2015 PMID: 25780466 PMCID: PMC4353766 DOI: 10.3892/etm.2015.2289
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Ther Med ISSN: 1792-0981 Impact factor: 2.447
Figure 1Intra-operative anesthetic management for the resection of paraganglioma and aortic segment in the patient. It shows that the CO and SBP changed with manipulation and clamping/unclamping of the aorta. The SBP was controlled within a reasonable range (85–135 mmHg) under the continuous infusion of NE at 2 μg/min when clamping/unclamping or after tumor removal. SBP, systolic blood pressure; CO, cardiac output; NE, norepinephrine; EBL, estimated blood loss; PRBC, packed red blood cells.
Figure 2Gross mass of the resected paraganglioma and aortic segment.
Management of para-ganglioma resection.
| Management | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Operative | |
| Pre-operative | α-blocker (≥2 weeks), β-blocker (after α-blocker), cathecholamine synthesis inhibitor, calcium channel blocker |
| Intra-operative | Communication between surgeons, nitrupresside/labetolol for BP, NE for tumor vein ligation/clamping, magnesium, clevidipine |
| Post-operative | Vasopressin, blood glucose, urine VMA |
| Avoid/caution | |
| Food | Aged cheese, yogurt, sour cream, wine, beer, chocolate, smoked meats, fermented bean or fish products, nuts, certain fruits and vegetables |
| Drugs | β blockade before α blockade, D2 receptor antagonists, serotonin/NE receptor inhibitors, sympathomimetics, chemotherapeutics, α-blocker for tumor manipulation, opiates, neuromuscular blockers, peptides and steroids |
Food and drugs should be avoided or used with caution mainly for peri-operative management. BP, blood pressure; MAO, monoamine oxidase inhibitor; TCA, tricyclic antidepressant; VMA, vanillylmandelic acid; NE, norepinephrine; D2, dopamine 2.