| Literature DB >> 31016049 |
Chanchal Mangla1, Kimmy Bais1, Joel Yarmush1.
Abstract
Providing anesthesia to patients with myotonic dystrophy (DM) can be very challenging due to the multisystemic effects of the disease and extreme sensitivity of these patients to sedatives, opioids, and anesthetic agents. Other factors such as hypothermia, shivering, or mechanical or electric stimulation during surgery can precipitate myotonia which is difficult to abolish and can lead to further complications. Generally, local or regional anesthesia is preferred to avoid the complications associated with general anesthesia in this group. However there are several case reports of successful use of general anesthesia (with or without volatile agents and with or without opioids). These general anesthetic cases led to postoperative admission to the regular floor or ICU. We present a case of a woman with a history of DM who underwent robotic assisted laparoscopic hysterectomy under general anesthesia and was discharged home on the same day.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31016049 PMCID: PMC6446115 DOI: 10.1155/2019/4282305
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Anesthesiol ISSN: 2090-6390
Review of reported cases of anesthesia in patients with myotonic dystrophy over last ten years.
| Author | Type of Anesthesia | Type of Surgery | Complications |
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| Gorelick L. et al. 2018 | MAC sedation and | EP study and pacemaker insertion | One patient develops arrhythmias/atrial fibrillation during the procedure |
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| Uno et al. 2017 [ | General with propofol infusion, rocuronium, and sugammadex for reversal. | Laparoscopic cholecystectomy | none |
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| Subramaniam et al. 2016 [ | General and epidural | Open resection of pheochromocytoma/paraganglioma | none |
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| Gaszynski T. 2016 [ | General with propofol and dexmedetomidine infusions | laparoscopic | none |
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| Corriea M. et al. 2016 [ | Continuous spinal | Laparoscopic cholecystectomy | none |
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| Gurunathan U. et al. 2015 [ | General with propofol/remifentanil infusion and reversal with sugammadex | Laparoscopic cholecystectomy | none |
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| Urciuoli P. et al. 2014 | General and thoracic epidural anesthesia without muscle relaxant | Laparoscopic cholecystectomy | none |
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| Piccard A. et al. 2013[ | General and sugammadex. use of acceleromyography | PEG insertion, orchiopexy, and tongue tie release | congenital MD |
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| Stourac P. et al. 2013 [ | General with sugammadex reversal | Cesarean section x 2 in same patient | remain intubated in ICU for 2 hours first time |
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| Bissinoto FM et al.[ | General with propofol and remifentanil infusion and reversal with prostigmine | Laparoscopic cholecystectomy | Patient developed myotonia after extubation, unable to intubate, maintained ventilation with LMA for few hours. |
Muscular impairment rating scale [1].
| Grade | Description |
|---|---|
| Grade 1 | No muscular impairment |
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| Grade 2 | Minimal signs: myotonia, facial weakness, jaw and temporal wasting, ptosis, no distal weakness except isolated digit flexor weakness |
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| Grade 3 | Distal weakness, no proximal weakness except isolated elbow extensor weakness |
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| Grade 4 | Mild to moderate proximal weakness |
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| Grade 5 | Severe proximal weakness |
Anesthetic drugs and use in myotonic dystrophy patients.
| Drug | Use in DM | Adverse effects/complications | Other effects |
|---|---|---|---|
| Propofol | Demonstrated to be safe in many reported cases [ | Can induce myotonia [ | Sensitivity is altered. Less than 1mg/kg has been shown to be enough to induce general anesthesia and intubation by Speedy et al. [ |
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| Thiopentone | Has been used in multiple case reports/series without any adverse event [ | Shown to result in unexpected apnea/prolonged respiratory depression [ | Prolonged apnea due to thiopentone seems to be idiosyncratic. |
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| Etomidate | Use has been described before [ | Continuous infusion not recommended due to steroid suppression [ | |
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| Volatile Anesthetics | Has been reported to be used with success [ | Concern with deep inhalation anesthesia leading to shivering and compromised cardiac status | Some reluctance to use initially due to association with malignant hyperthermia (MH). But recent literature showed DM patients are no more susceptible to MH than general population. [ |
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| Muscle relaxants | Shorter and intermediate acting nondepolarizing agents are safe to be used. | Depolarizing muscle relaxants has been shown to induce myotonia leading to inability to ventilate and maintain the airway [ | Avoidance of muscle relaxants, if possible, is recommended. |
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| Reversal agents | Sugammadex has been reported to be safe and has been used multiple times in recent past [ | Incomplete reversal and postoperative breathing difficulties have been noted in multiple case reports where neostigmine was used [ | Avoid use of anticholinesterases for reversal [ |
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| Dexmedetomidine | Successful use of dexmedetomidine also has been reported to provide opioid free anesthesia in many recent case reports [ | none reported | |
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| Opioids | Use of shorter acting opioids is recommended for intraoperative period. | Higher risk of respiratory depression. | Avoid opioids in preoperative and postoperative period. |
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| Total intravenous anesthesia | Use of propofol and remifentanil infusion have been reported before in cases of DM [ | Remifentanil has been linked to postoperative hyperalgesia [ | |
Risk factors for perioperative complications [13, 30].
| Upper abdominal surgery |
| Longer duration of surgery (>1 hour) |
| Severe muscular disability |
| High MIRS score |
| Use of muscle relaxants without reversal |
| Use of perioperative morphine |
| Increased CTG repeat size |
Summary of anesthesia management in patient with myotonic dystrophy.
| Preoperative | Assess the type and duration of surgery. If it is emergent or upper abdominal surgery, expected duration longer than 1 hour, have posted bed available in ICU, patient may require post-op mechanical ventilation |
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| Intraoperative | Choice of anesthesia local or regional if possible |
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| Postoperative | Continuous pulse oximetry and EKG monitoring for prolonged period. |