| Literature DB >> 27679735 |
Lionel Bouvet1, Caroline Augris2, Clémence Aubergy2, Dominique Chassard3.
Abstract
We report two cases of patients presenting for elective surgery, in whom significant gastric contents were identified by performing fortuitous ultrasound examination of their antral area. The first patient presented for a day-case surgery scheduled under regional anesthesia. With his consent, ultrasound examination of the antral area was by chance performed within the context of training for this technique, showing significant solid contents in the stomach. The patient admitted that he had not respected preoperative fasting. The second patient was scheduled for an elective ophthalmologic surgery. Ultrasound examination of the antrum showed that the antrum was dilated, with significant solid and liquid gastric contents. This case may be related to a strongly delayed gastric emptying. These two cases demonstrate that some elective patients may present with significant gastric contents exposing them to the risk of pulmonary aspiration in the case of general anesthesia.Entities:
Keywords: anesthesiology; aspiration; gastric content; pneumonia; ultrasound
Year: 2016 PMID: 27679735 PMCID: PMC5034026 DOI: 10.15557/JoU.2016.0032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ultrason ISSN: 2084-8404
Fig. 1Ultrasound image of the antrum of the first patient. The antrum is dilated with homogenous echogenic content, corresponding to solid contents
Fig. 2Ultrasound image of the antrum of the second patient. The antrum is dilated, with both echogenic and non-echogenic contents, corresponding to liquid and solid contents