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GOOD MORNING

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Clinical presentation similar to high spinal anesthesia, but with delayed onset ... of hyperbaric solutions of lidocaine. Thank You For Your Time! ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: GOOD MORNING


1
GOOD MORNING!!
  • R1???/Dr.???

2
1. Anterior Spinal Artery Syndrome After
Abdominal Stabbing and Resuscitative
Thoracotomy 2. Complications Induced by
Regional Anesthesia
3
Anterior Spinal Artery Syndrome After Abdominal
Stabbing and Resuscitative Thoracotomy
  • J Trauma, 2007 62 526-528

C. Aylwin et al, Royal London Hospital
4
Introduction
  • Ant. spinal artery syndrome (ASAS) interruption
    of blood flow in the ant. spinal a.
  • Infarction of the ant. and lat. columns of the
    spinal cord

5
Introduction
  • Plaque rupture vessel thrombosis
  • During low-flow state of profound shock
  • After aortic cross-clamping (aortic aneurysm
    surgery)
  • Not common in trauma patients w/o spinal cord
    injury

6
Case Report
ASAS Resuscitative thoracotomy Aortic
cross-clamping Laparotomy Permanent paraplegia
7
Incident
  • 35 y/o male, previously fit
  • Multiple stab wound to neck, chest, abdomen, back
  • Shocked, tachycardia, hypotension GCS14

8
ER
  • Arrived at ER within 30 min of the initial
    emergency
  • CXR pneumothorax (-), hemothorax
  • Sono free fluid in abd. cavity no cardiac
    tamponade

9
OR
  • Transferred to OR 35 min after arrival
  • PEA ? CPR, epinephrine 1 mg
  • Emergent lt ant. thoracotomy

10
OR
  • 2 L of blood in the lt hemithorax
  • Empty heart
  • 2 lacerations over lt hemidiaphragm
  • Aorta cross-clamped above the diaphragm ? SBP
    restored

11
OR
  • Laparotomy 1.5 L of blood in abd.
  • Spleen/lt kidney/stomach/jejunum laceration
    repaired
  • Total aorta clamp time62 min

12
OR
  • No injuries to the thoracic or lumbar spinal
    column!

13
ICU
  • Wound closure at POD2
  • Sepsis
  • Superficial wound dehiscence
  • Tracheostomy

14
Recovery
  • Absence of lower limb movement noted 12 days
    after injury
  • 12 more days passed before detailed NEURO exam

15
Neurologic Exam
  • Flaccid paralysis of both legs
  • Preserved light touch and joint position sense
  • Sphincter tone (-)
  • Spinal level of deficit T12

16
MRI
17
Diagnosis
  • Ant. spinal artery syndrome
  • No evidence of functional recovery one year later

18
Discussion
19
Spinal Cords Blood Supply
  • Ant. spinal artery 2/3 of spinal white matter
  • Post. spinal artery dorsal column

20
Spinal Cords Blood Supply
21
Spinal Cords Blood Supply
  • Thoracic cord segmental aortic branches
  • Ant. radicular artery of Adamkiewicz (T12-L2)
  • Lowest part and cauda equina branches from int.
    iliac a.

22
Spinal Cords Blood Supply
  • The boundaries between each blood supply are
    vulnerable to hypoperfusion

23
Anterior Spinal Artery Syndrome
  • First described by Spiller in 1909
  • Motor and sensory loss
  • Bowel and urinary disturbances
  • Infarction of the ant. and lat. spinal cord

24
Anterior Spinal Artery Syndrome
  • Spino-thalamic tract involved pain, temperature
    affected
  • Proprioception, light touch, vibration preserved

25
Anterior Spinal Artery Syndrome
  • Thoracic cord lower limbs flaccid paralysis,
    spasticity, hyper-reflexia
  • Lumbo-thoracic cord lower limbs wasting and
    areflexia
  • Descending autonomic fibers incontinence

26
Anterior Spinal Artery Syndrome
  • Vessel thrombosis
  • Embolism from aorta or heart
  • Aortic cross-clamping

27
Anterior Spinal Artery Syndrome
  • 0.25 of abd. aortic surgeries
  • 21 in thoraco-abdominal aortic surgeries
  • No reports of ASAS after resuscitative
    thoracotomy and aortic cross-clamp for
    penetrating abd. trauma

28
Anterior Spinal Artery Syndrome
  • Profound shock
  • Off-set by immediate recognition and ACLS
  • Prolonged aortic clamp was the prime cause of
    ASAS in this case

29
Summary
  • All trauma surgeons should be aware of the
    potential for spinal cord ischemia and ASAS and
    minimize clamping times

30
Complications Induced by Regional Anesthesia
31
  • Most regional anesthetic techniques, even in
    expert hands, have a failure rate of 1-10
  • The complications range from bothersome to
    crippling and life-threatening

32
Complications of Neuraxial Blocks
33
Physiological Responses
34
High Neural Blockade
  • Occur with spinal or epidural anesthesia
  • Excessive dose
  • Unusual sensitivity

35
High Neural Blockade
  • Dyspnea, upper limbs weakness/numbness
  • Nausea/vomiting
  • Hypotension, bradycardia

36
High Neural Blockade
  • ASAS have been reported, possibly due to
    prolonged severe hypotension with increased
    intraspinal pressure

37
Cardiac Arrest During SA
  • Large prospective studies report a high incidence
    of 11500
  • Vagal response decreased preload

38
Urinary Retention
  • Local blockade of S2-S4 roots decreases bladder
    tone and inhibits the voiding reflex
  • Epidural opioids
  • Pronounced in males
  • Persistent bladder dysfunction may be a
    manifestation of serious neural injury

39
Needle/Catheter Insertion
40
Inadequate Anesthesia
  • Inversely proportional to the clinicians
    experience
  • Movement of needle during injection
  • Incomplete entry of the needle opening into the
    desired space
  • Loss of potency of LA solution

41
Intravascular Injection
  • CNS seizure and loss of consciousness
  • CV hypotension, arrhythmia, cardiovascular
    collapse
  • More common with epidural and caudal block
    (higher dosage) than spinal blockade

42
Intravascular Injection
  • Carefully aspirate before injection
  • Use a test dose
  • Inject in increment doses
  • Close observation (tinnitus, lingual sensations)

43
Total Spinal Anesthesia
  • Occur during epidural/caudal anesthesia
  • Rapid onset
  • Subarachnoid lavage should be considered repeatd
    withdrawal of 5 ml of CSF and replacement with NS

44
Subdural Injection
  • Clinical presentation similar to high spinal
    anesthesia, but with delayed onset (15-30 min),
    and lasts for hours
  • Subdural space is a potential space that extends
    cranially

45
Backache
  • Cause by various degree of tissue trauma
  • 25-30 of GA recipients also complain of back
    pain
  • May be an important sign of more serious
    complications (epidural hematoma and abscess)

46
Postdural Puncture Headache
  • Any breach of dura may produce PDPH
  • Bilateral, frontal or retroorbital, occipital,
    extends into neck associated with photophobia
    and nausea
  • Aggravated by sitting or standing

47
Postdural Puncture Headache
  • Leakage of CSF from a dural defect decreased ICP
  • Traction of dura and tentorium
  • Young age, female, pregnancy, large needle
  • Epidural blood patch 15-20 ml of autologous
    blood

48
Neurological Injury
  • Injury of nerve roots or spinal cord
  • Direct injection into the spinal cord can cause
    paraplegia
  • Damaged conus medullaris sacral dysfunction
  • Some studies suggest catheters can cause
    inflammation or demyelination in nerve tissue

49
Spinal or Epidural Hematoma
  • Trauma of epidural veins
  • Abnormal coagulation or bleeding disorder
  • 1150,000 for epidural blocks 1220,000 for
    spinal blocks
  • Some occur right after the removal of an epidural
    catheter

50
Spinal or Epidural Hematoma
  • Symptoms more sudden compared with epidural
    abscess
  • Sharp back and leg pain
  • Progress to numbness
  • Motor weakness
  • Sphincter dysfunction

51
Epidural Abscess
  • Incidence 1/6500 to 1/500,000
  • Catheter related
  • Presentation could be delayed for weeks

52
Epidural Abscess
  • Back or vertebral pain
  • Nerve root or radicular pain
  • Motor/sensory deficits sphincter dysfunction
  • Paraplegia/paralysis

53
Epidural Abscess
  • Once suspected, the catheter should be removed
    and tip cultured
  • Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus
    epidermidis

54
Drug Toxicity
55
Transient Neurological Symptoms
  • Back pain radiating to the legs, w/o motor or
    sensory deficits
  • Occurs after the resolution of spinal block,
    resolves after several days
  • Most common with hyperbaric lidocaine

56
Cauda Equina Synrome
  • Associated with continuous spinal catheters and
    5 lidocaine
  • Bowel and bladder dysfunction with multiple nerve
    root injury
  • Sensory deficits may be patchy
  • Pooling or maldistribution of hyperbaric
    solutions of lidocaine

57
Thank You For Your Time!?
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