Chad C. Cripe MD (Instructor of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine) , Akash R. Patel MD (Assistant Professor of Pediatrics) , Scott D. Markowitz MD, FAAP (Associate Professor of Anesthesiology) , Tiffany S. Behringer MD (Resident in Emergency Medicine) , Ronald S. Litman DO (Professor of Anesthesiology and Pediatrics)
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引用次数: 5
Abstract
Study Objective
To perform a qualitative analysis of noncardiac patients who developed suspected intraoperative supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) during general anesthesia.
Design
Retrospective database analysis and chart review.
Setting
Operating room of a university-affiliated children’s hospital.
Measurements
The records of children without cardiac disease who received general anesthesia at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia from July 1998 through June 2011 were reviewed. Patients with heart rate values above 180 beats per minute were identified, as were specific medications or key words in the free-text fields of the anesthesia records that would be indicative of a tachyarrhythmia. Each case was reviewed by at least two authors; each patient was assigned a diagnosis classification of “highly suspicious” or “unlikely” SVT. The highly suspicious SVT cases were examined in detail to determine the specific aims.
Main Results
36 subjects out of a total of 285,353 anesthetics administered during the study period were suspected by the anesthesia care team to have had an episode of intraoperative SVT: 22 were “highly suspicious” events, and 14 were “unlikely” events. The highly suspicious SVT events occurred in all phases of anesthesia, and none led to any hemodynamic instability. Effective treatments included vagal maneuvers, pharmacologic antiarrhythmics, or no treatment if the event resolved spontaneously before treatment. Six patients had outpatient follow-up and three received antiarrhythmic medications to control ongoing SVT.
Conclusions
SVT during the intraoperative period in noncardiac pediatric patients was uncommon. When it occurred, it was not associated with clinically significant patient morbidity. For some patients, the anesthesia unmasked a predisposition for re-entrant SVT and those patients remained on maintenance antiarrhythmic therapy following discharge home.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Clinical Anesthesia (JCA) addresses all aspects of anesthesia practice, including anesthetic administration, pharmacokinetics, preoperative and postoperative considerations, coexisting disease and other complicating factors, cost issues, and similar concerns anesthesiologists contend with daily. Exceptionally high standards of presentation and accuracy are maintained.
The core of the journal is original contributions on subjects relevant to clinical practice, and rigorously peer-reviewed. Highly respected international experts have joined together to form the Editorial Board, sharing their years of experience and clinical expertise. Specialized section editors cover the various subspecialties within the field. To keep your practical clinical skills current, the journal bridges the gap between the laboratory and the clinical practice of anesthesiology and critical care to clarify how new insights can improve daily practice.