| Literature DB >> 26698202 |
Fatima Cody Stanford1, Janey S Pratt2, Ozanan R Meireles2, Miriam A Bredella3.
Abstract
A 61-year-old woman with a medical history of intracerebral haemorrhage, hypertension, hyperlipidaemia and carotid stenosis presented to the emergency department with altered mental status 3 weeks after undergoing a vertical sleeve gastrectomy for severe obesity. She presented with a hypertensive emergency and a National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale of 4. CT of the head was unrevealing. MRI showed an abnormal signal within the bilateral posterior border-zone areas, with several foci in the parietal and occipital lobes, and thalami, suggestive of posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES). The patient was initially placed on a labetalol drip and her preoperative antihypertensive medications--amlodipine, captopril, triamterene and hydrochlorothiazide--were gradually reintroduced. She returned to her baseline and was stable on discharge. Rapid withdrawal of antihypertensive medications in the early postoperative period of bariatric surgery was the aetiology of PRES in this patient. This case report discusses postoperative care of bariatric surgery patients having hypertension. 2015 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26698202 PMCID: PMC4691905 DOI: 10.1136/bcr-2015-212290
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Case Rep ISSN: 1757-790X