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[Efficacy of Dexmedetomidine for Awake Bronchoscopy in a 3-month Infant with Severe Subglottic Stenosis and Pneumothorax due to Cervical Cystic Lymphangioma].

Authors :
Saito K
Toyama H
Ejima Y
Haitani A
Yamauchi M
Source :
Masui. The Japanese journal of anesthesiology [Masui] 2016 Oct; Vol. 65 (10), pp. 1026-1030.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

A 3-month-old female infant was admitted because of tachypnea and retractive breathing. Chest X-ray and computed tomography demonstrated right pneumo- thorax and severe subglottic stenosis. She was sched- uled for chest drainage and diagnostic fiberoptic bron- choscopy (FOB), and securing airway by tracheal intubation or tracheostomy. Continuous infusion of dexmedetomidine(DEX, 1.25 iμ · kg(-1) · hr(-1))was started and it was increased to 3.75,μg · kg(-1) · hr(-1) ten min- utes later. Chest drainage was performed with regional anesthesia under deep sedation and she responded only to painful stimulus. After the completion of the chest drainage, chest X-ray revealed the expansion of her right lung. Then, FOB was performed under regional anesthesia with DEX sedation. Moderate sub- glottic stenosis under spontaneous breathing, and the disappearance of the stenosis under positive pressure ventilation was observed by FOB. FOB findings sug- gested that she had acquired tracheomalacia due to external compression by cervical cystic lymphangioma. Therefore, to avoid deterioration of her tracheomalacia, we did not perform tracheal intubation or tracheos- tomy, which could provoke tracheal edema, deforma- tion and subsequent further deterioration of airway stenosis. Although the dose of DEX was higher than the rec- ommended dose, high dose DEX led to adequate seda- tion and analgesia for pediatric FOB without respira- tory distress or hemodynamic instability. We believe that DEX is useful for an infant with difficult airway requiring preservation of airway smooth muscle tone and spontaneous breathing.

Details

Language :
Japanese
ISSN :
0021-4892
Volume :
65
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Masui. The Japanese journal of anesthesiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
30358280