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Impact of Modified Anesthesia Management for Pediatric Patients With Williams Syndrome

Authors :
Alexander R. Schmidt
Manchula Navaratnam
Chandra Ramamoorthy
R. Thomas Collins
Yamini Adusumelli
Yingjie Weng
Kirstie L. MacMillen
Source :
Journal of cardiothoracic and vascular anesthesia. 35(12)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Objective This study compared the percent change in systolic blood pressure and the incidence of adverse cardiac events (ACEs; defined as cardiac arrest, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, arrhythmias, or ST-segment changes) during anesthesia induction in patients with Williams syndrome (WS) before and after implementation of a perioperative management strategy. Design Retrospective observational cohort study. Setting Single quaternary academic referral center. Participants The authors reviewed the records of all children with WS at the authors’ institution who underwent general anesthesia for cardiac catheterization, diagnostic imaging, or any type of surgery between November 2008 and August 2019. The authors identified 142 patients with WS, 48 of whom underwent 118 general anesthesia administrations. A historic group (HG) was compared with the intervention group (IG). Interventions Change in perioperative management (three-stage risk stratification: preoperative intravenous hydration, intravenous anesthesia induction, and early use of vasoactives). Measurements and Main Results The authors determined event rates within 60 minutes of anesthesia induction. Standardized mean difference (SMD) was calculated (SMD >0.2 suggests clinically meaningful difference). Sixty-seven general anesthesia encounters were recorded in the HG (mean age, 4.8 years; mean weight, 16.3 kg) and 51 in the IG (mean age, 6.0 years; mean weight, 18.2 kg). The change in systolic blood pressure was –17.5% (–30.0, –5.0) in the HG versus –9% (–18.0, 5.0) in the IG (p = 0.015; SMD = 0.419), and the incidence of ACEs was 6% in the HG and 2% in the IG (p = 0.542; SMD = 0.207). Conclusions Preoperative risk stratification, preoperative intravenous hydration, intravenous induction, and early use of continuous vasoactives resulted in greater hemodynamic stability, with a 2% incidence of ACEs.

Details

ISSN :
15328422
Volume :
35
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of cardiothoracic and vascular anesthesia
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....54400eca9cd685657e35f7aca81fbcbe