Abstract

The anesthetic management of patients with an anterior mediastinal mass is very challenging due to the potential risk of hemodynamic and respiratory compromise. A specialized anesthetic plan should be developed for in patients with an anterior mediastinal mass based on the preoperative clinical symptoms as well as, radiographic, computed tomographic, spirometric, and echocardiographic data [1,2]. A 31-year-old man (height 173.5 cm, weight 70.4 kg) came to our emergency department with right-sided chest discom fort, dry cough, progressive dyspnea, and orthopnea for the previous 4 weeks. The initial chest X-ray evaluation revealed a large amount of right side pleural effusion and a bulky mediastinal mass. Multi directional computed tomography revealed a 12.3 cm homogenous soft tissue mass in the anterior mediastinum compressing the superior vena cava and dis placing the ascending aorta. The trachea and both main bronchi were patent, but a cross-sectional area of the right upper lobe bronchus (7.21 mm) was reduced 44% relative to the left upper lobe bronchus (12.97 mm). Right loculated pleural effusion, totally collapsed right lower lobe and subsegmental atelectasis in the right middle lobe were noted. A therapeutic and diagnostic thoracentesis was done under local anesthesia, and 1,600 ml of pleural fluid was removed. Cytology of pleural fluid revealed many lymphocytes and mesothelial cells, but these were negative for malignancy. However, because dyspnea persisted and pleural effusion was increased after admission, a mediastinoscopic biopsy and pleural decortication were performed under general anesthesia. In the operating room, the CAPIOX emergency bypass system (CAPIOX Ⓡ EBS TM , Terumo Corporation, Tokyo, Japan) was prepared in the event of cardiopulmonary collapse. Before the induction of general anesthesia, a 20-guage catheter was placed in the right radial artery for continuous blood pressure monitoring. The patient was placed in the Semi-Fowler’s position with the head elevated 30 degrees to relieve the discomfort of the supine position. Initial vital signs were blood pressure 105/65 mmHg, heart rate 100 beats/min, respiration 25 breaths/min, and O2 saturation 96%. Preoxygenation with 100% O2 was administered using a face mask, and anesthesia was induced with a continuous infusion of propofol (effect-site concentration 4.0-5.0 μg/ml and remifentanil (effect- site concentration 3.0 5.0 ng/ml using a target-controlled infusion pump (Orchestra Ⓡ Base Primea, Fresenius Vial, Brezins, France) and a bolus dose of rocuronium 50 mg via a preexisting 16-guage IV catheter in the vein on the medial surface of the right leg. Intubation was successfully achieved using the left-sided Robert-Shaw double lumen bronchial tube in the supine position. Breath sounds were heard on both sides of the chest. Mechanical ventilation was maintained with a tidal volume, respiratory rate and partial pressure of end-tidal carbon dioxide of 500 ml, 15 breaths/min, and 28-32 mmHg, respectively. After induction, the arterial blood pressure began to drop to 60/35 mmHg and the heart rate increased to 110 beats/min. Ephedrine 10 mg were administered intravenously, but the vital signs were not improved. A transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) was performed for evaluation of hemodynamic instability. It showed that a large mass compressed the right atrium

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.