| Literature DB >> 34667406 |
Reena Khantwal Joshi1, Neeraj Aggarwal1, Mridul Agarwal1, Raja Joshi1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hemodynamically significant patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) is frequently encountered in preterm infants sometimes requiring surgical attention. Although PDA ligation is regularly performed in the operating room, conducting it at the bedside in a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) and its anesthetic management remains challenging. AIM: We aim to discuss the anesthetic considerations in patients undergoing bedside PDA ligation and describe our experience highlighting the feasibility and safety of this procedure. SETTING ANDEntities:
Keywords: Anesthesia for preterm patent ductus arteriosus; bedside patent ductus arteriosus ligation; ductal ligation in neonatal intensive care unit; postligation cardiac syndrome
Year: 2021 PMID: 34667406 PMCID: PMC8457282 DOI: 10.4103/apc.apc_41_21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Pediatr Cardiol ISSN: 0974-5149
Preoperative checklist
| Bedside PDA ligation checklist |
| Order NPO of 6 h prior to surgery (4 h If breast-milk fed) |
| With fasting initiate 4 ml/kg/h of 10% dextrose with half normal saline/PN as per neonatology |
| Set NICU ambient temperature at 28°C |
| Check open-care system, switch the overhead lights on, and fix radiant warmer to manual mode at 35°C. Keep the side rails off |
| Three-lead continuous ECG |
| Core (rectal) and peripheral (skin of the dorsum of foot) temperature probes |
| Right hand (preductal) and lower limb (postductal) SpO2 probes |
| Appropriately sized BP cuffs placed if invasive arterial line is not already |
| Check CXR for ETT position and bilateral lung fields |
| Check for in-line EtCO2 |
| Record optimal ventilatory settings (robust communication with the NICU team) |
| Set humidifier at 37°C |
| Jackson Rees circuit should be kept ready at bed side |
| Two patent I/V line accesses assured |
| NTG (1 mcg/kg/ml) prepared |
| Baseline electrolytes, arterial blood gas, and blood sugar levels should be checked and corrected before induction |
| Cross-matched PRBC (15 ml/kg) checked and available in NICU |
| Transfuse 10 ml/kg RDP if platelet count is 50,000-80,000/dl or SDP if<50,000/dl, 2 h before surgery |
PDA: Patent ductus arteriosus, PN: Parentral nutrition, NICU: Neonatal intensive care unit, ECG: Electrocardiogram, SpO2: Pulse oximetry, BP: Blood pressure, ETT: Endotracheal tube, EtCO2: End-tidal carbon dioxide, I/V: Intravenous, NTG: Nitroglycerine, RDP: Random donor platelets, SDP: Single donor platelets, PRBC: Packed red blood cells, CXR: Chest X-ray, NPO: Nil per oral
Demographic details
| Variable | Distribution |
|---|---|
| Age (days), median (IQR) | 30 (19-52) |
| Gender (male/female) | 39/27 |
| Body weight (kg), median (IQR) | 1.4 (0.97-2) |
| Gestational age (weeks), median (IQR) | 31 (28-33) |
| NSAID therapy | |
| Three cycles | 39 |
| Two cycles | 12 |
| Contraindicated | 15 |
| Culture-positive sepsis | 20 |
| NEC | 13 |
| IVH | 7 |
| Ventilation dependence | |
| Invasive | 32 |
| Noninvasive | 25 |
| Oxygen by nasal cannula/mask | 9 |
IQR: Interquartile range, NSAID: Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, NEC: Necrotizing enterocolitis, IVH: Intraventricular hemorrhage
Noncardiac anomalies
| Extracardiac anomalies |
|
|---|---|
| Tracheobronchomalacia | 4 |
| Hydrocephalus | 4 |
| Inguinal hernia | 3 |
| Spina bifida occulta | 2 |
| Congenital talipes equinovarus | 2 |
| Preauricular tag | 2 |
| VII cranial nerve palsy | 1 |
| Diaphragmatic eventration | 1 |
| Tracheoesophageal atresia | 1 |
| Meconium ileus | 1 |
| Choanal atresia | 1 |
| Pierre robin syndrome | 1 |
| Congenital adrenal hyperplasia | 1 |
| Congenital rubella syndrome | 1 |
Mortality
| Patient serial number | Gestational age (weeks) | Age at surgery (days) | Weight (kg) | Postoperative day | Cause of death |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11 | 32 | 14 | 0.885 | 6 | Sepsis, congenital rubella syndrome, pancytopenia |
| 23 | 31 | 33 | 1.055 | 5 | NEC |
| 47 | 28 | 26 | 1.200 | 3 | Pulmonary hemorrhage |
NEC: Necrotizing enterocolitis
Postligation hemodynamic concerns: Detection and management
| Blood pressure control |
| Acute hypertension can lead to IVH and traumatic ligation |
| NTG (1-2 mcg/kg) bolus with supplemental opioid and relaxants just before clipping |
| Post ligation cardiac syndrome |
| Cardiovascular collapse and pulmonary dysfunction |
| Typically presenting 6-12 h postoperative |
| Diagnosed by |
| Worsening ventilatory parameters, high EtCO2, and low SpO2 |
| Diastolic hypertension due to acute increase in LV afterload |
| Hypotension due to systolic LV dysfunction |
| TTE to ascertain systolic as well as diastolic LV function |
| Management |
| Manage pulmonary dysfunction by ventilatory optimization/high frequency oscillator |
| Acute rise in afterload is best managed by initiating vasodilator/inodilator therapy |
| Preload dependent systolic dysfunction is managed by volume resuscitation |
| Volume unresponsive hypotension mandates inotropes |
| Iatrogenic coarctation |
| Disappearance of pulsatility in arterial waveform or loss of SpO2 trace in lower limb along with brachiocephalic hypertension just after ligation |
| NIRS (cerebral - somatic difference) also of assistance |
| Should be confirmed by TTE and addressed urgently in the OR using appropriate repair techniques |
| Inadvertent ligation of left pulmonary artery |
| Intraoperative detection: Decrease in SpO2 and a decrease followed by an increase in EtCO2[ |
| Postoperative detection: Persistent ductal murmur, no improvement in ventilatory parameters or oligemic left lung on CXR |
| Confirmed by TTE and must prompt urgent unclipping or repair in the OR |
IVH: Intraventricular hemorrhage, NTG: Nitro-glycerine, NIRS: Near infrared spectrometry, OR: Operating room, EtCO2: End-tidal carbon dioxide, SpO2: Pulse oximetry, CXR: Chest X-ray, LV: Left ventricular, TTE: Transthoracic echocardiography