1.Clinical evaluation of laryngotracheal injury aftr short-term endotracheal intubation.
Korean Journal of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery 1993;36(4):779-784
No abstract available.
Intubation, Intratracheal*
2.The Role of Jugular Venous Oxyhemoglobin Saturation Monitoring During Cardic Surgery.
Yeungnam University Journal of Medicine 1994;11(1):49-54
Postoperative brain damage is one of most serious complications of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). To prevent brain damage during CPB, adequate cerebral perfusion for cerebral oxygen demand should be maintained. This study monitored jugular venous oxyhemoglobin saturation (SjO₂), which reflects the overall balance of cerebral oxygen supply and demand, intermittently in 10 patients undergoing cardiac surgery. At the initiation of CPB, in spite of a significant decrease in mean arterial pressure, SjO₂ did not change, and it was stable during the hypothermic period of CPB. But a significan reduction in SjO₂ was observed during the rewarming period, and SjO₂ had an inverse linear correlation with esophageal temperature. Furthermore, the percent decrease of SjO₂ was related to rewarming speed. Therefore, therapeutic approaches for SjO₂ desaturation include slower rewarming, increasing cerebral blood flow, decreasing the cerebral metabolic rate for oxygen, increasing oxygen content, and increasing perfusion flow rate.
Arterial Pressure
;
Brain
;
Cardiopulmonary Bypass
;
Cerebrovascular Circulation
;
Humans
;
Oxygen
;
Oxyhemoglobins*
;
Perfusion
;
Rewarming
;
Thoracic Surgery
3.Factors Influencing Postoperative Urinary Retention after Hemorrhoidectomy.
Dae Lim JEE ; Dong Hyeok SEO ; Sun Ok SONG
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 1997;33(3):491-496
BACKGROUND: In previous our retrospective study, we concluded that administered fluid volume, duration of operation, operative procedures and anesthetic techniques were the major factors of postoperative urinary retention. However, the administered fluid volume, age, types and duration of the operation confined to hemorrhoidectomy was questioned as a precipitating factor. The high retention rate in spinal anesthesia is also questioned. METHODS: We investigated these possible precipitating factors of urinary retention in healthy patients (n=154) undergoing hemorrhoidectomy. The patients were randomly divided into three different anesthetic techniques: caudal (2% lidocaine 300 mg with 1 : 200,000 epinephrine), spinal (0.5% tetracaine 5 mg with epinephrine 0.1 mg or 5% lidocaine 40 mg) and general (enflurane, N2O, vecuronium). Urinary retentin was searched according to above factors following surgery. RESULTS: The overall urinary retention rate was 46.1%. The retention rate in patients with spinal anesthesia was higher than that in those with other anesthetic techniques (p<0.05). There was no significant difference between patients with lidocaine and tetracaine spinal anesthesia in urinary retention rate. The administered fluid volume in patients with urinary retention was significantly higher than that of patients without retention (p<0.05). Age, duration and types of hemorrhoidectomy did not significantly affect urinary retention rate. CONCLUSIONS: Restriction of fluid administration and avoidance of spinal anesthesia are necessary in reducing postoperative urinary retention following hemorrhoidectomy.
Anesthesia, Spinal
;
Epinephrine
;
Hemorrhoidectomy*
;
Humans
;
Lidocaine
;
Precipitating Factors
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Surgical Procedures, Operative
;
Tetracaine
;
Urinary Retention*
4.Changes in Psedocholinesterase Activity Following IV Bolus Administration of Succinylcholine .
Dae Lim JEE ; Jung In BAE ; Jae Kyu CHEUN
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 1988;21(2):318-320
Plasma cholinesterase was assayed during the period immediately following IV bolus injection of succinylcholine 1mg/kg to test the effect of succinylcholine on pseudocholinesterase activity. Twenty healthy adult patients scheduled for elective surgery were studied. The resutls were as follows: The mean value of pre-injection pseudocholinesterase activity was 1124.15 IU/L, and the activity following succinylcholin injection was 1159.55IU/L during fasciculation, 982.70 at 1 min, 936.60 at 3 min, 891.25 at 5 min, 926.80 at 7 min, 1015.45 at 10 min, and 1007.70 at 15 min. It was concluded that the tendency to increase pseuducholinesterase activity during fasciculation seems to be due to choline, the metabolite of succinylcholine, however the cause of the significant decrease in pseudocholinesterase activity after fasciculation is uncertain. The only suggested mechanism is due to the inhibition of pseudocholinesterase by succinylcholine and its metabolites.
Adult
;
Choline
;
Cholinesterases
;
Fasciculation
;
Humans
;
Plasma
;
Pseudocholinesterase
;
Succinylcholine*
5.Hemodynamic Responses and Oxygen Availability in Unanesthetized Dogs during Apnea.
Dae Lim JEE ; Jun Man PARK ; Seong Kee KIM ; Jae Kyu CHEUN
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 1997;33(6):1020-1028
BACKGROUND: This study examined hemodynamic variables, oxygen delivery, extraction, and consumption in response to acute progressive hypoxia and hypercarbia in the setting of apnea. METHODS: Apnea was induced in 9 healthy mongrel dogs by disconnecting animals from mechanical ventilation of 30 minutes with pure oxygen. Hemodynamic variables, oxygen transport, extraction, and consumption were rapidly and repeatedly measured using pulmonary arterial and arterial catheters until cardiac output was undetectable. RESULTS: The baseline PaO2, PaCO2, pH, base excess were 318 +/- 137 mm Hg, 36 +/- 3.5 mm Hg, 7.30 +/- 0.06, 6.81 +/- 2.65 mmol/l respectively. Hypercarbia and hypoxemia (76 +/- 33 mm Hg) was first noted at 1 and 4 minute respectively. Base excess was not changed. Indices of preload (PCWP and CVP) were increased early in the time course (p<0.05). In contrast, indices of afterload (SVR) increased later, just before cardiac decompensation began (p<0.05). No significant reduction of cardiac output, oxygen delivery, extraction, and consumption was detected just until abrupt cardiac decompensation started, 5 minute. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that the early increase in preload was primarily due to hypercarbia whereas the late increase in afterload was due to hypoxemia, but the main cause of acute cardiac decompensation was a critical decrease in arterial oxygen tension with some contribution of increased preload and afterload.
Animals
;
Anoxia
;
Apnea*
;
Cardiac Output
;
Catheters
;
Dogs*
;
Hemodynamics*
;
Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
;
Oxygen*
;
Respiration, Artificial
6.Four Patients with Culture Negative, Afebrile Infective Endocarditis Who Mainly Showed Immunologic Phenomena.
Ki Kwon LIM ; Jee Hyuk PARK ; Jeong Euy PARK ; Dae Won KIM ; Kap No LEE
Korean Circulation Journal 1987;17(4):771-775
A total of 33 patients with infective endocarditis were observed in the Guro and Hye Hwa Hospitals of Korea University Between September, 1981 and Feb, 1987. Among thses patients four patients presented with heart murmur and heart failure and had vegetation like findings observed on the two dimensional echocardiography. But these patients did not have any fever or leukocytosis in the peripheral blood and the repeated blood cultures were negative. They showed the immunologic phenomena of infective endocarditis such as microscopic hematuria in 4 patients, rheumatoid factor in 3 patients, false positive VDRL in one patient. The serum complement was decreased in 2 patients in whom it was checked. We report these 4 patients because we think these patients might be in the clinical stage in which the infecting organism is spontaneously cleared but the immunologic sequelae are remained.
Complement System Proteins
;
Echocardiography
;
Endocarditis*
;
Fever
;
Heart Failure
;
Heart Murmurs
;
Hematuria
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Leukocytosis
;
Rheumatoid Factor
7.Spinal Cord Infarction following Spine Surgery in the Patient with Vertebral Bursting Fracture : A case report.
Sang Jin PARK ; Hyun Chul JUNG ; Dae Lim JEE
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2007;52(4):471-474
Spinal cord infarction as a complication of spine surgery occurs rarely. Herein, a case of spinal cord infarction, which developed in a 69 year old woman following posterior decompression and internal fixation for a T11 bursting fracture, is descirbed. The anesthetic induction and intraoperative course were uneventful, except at the end of the procedure, where her blood pressure suddenly dropped from 130/90 to 90/60 mmHg. The patient was aggressively treated with a transfusion and vasopressor, the blood pressure then returned to its usual value within 10 minutes. However, during a physical examination in the recovery room, the patient was found to have flaccid lower limbs, with impaired sensory function below the T8 level. Her cord diameter had increased, and a high signal lesion was observed within the thoracic spinal cord, from T9 to T12 level on T2-weighted MR images, which was diagnosing as a spinal cord infarction, was and showed no improvement despite the immediate and aggressive treatment.
Aged
;
Blood Pressure
;
Decompression
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Infarction*
;
Lower Extremity
;
Physical Examination
;
Recovery Room
;
Sensation
;
Spinal Cord*
;
Spine*
8.Intravenous Vitamin K-induced Cardiovascular Collapse : A case report.
Sang Jin PARK ; Chae Rim SEONG ; Dae Lim JEE
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2007;52(4):461-464
A cardiovascular collapse, due to preoperatively administered intravenous vitamin K (phytonadione), was experienced in a 59-year-old woman who was scheduled to undergo a left upper lung lobectomy. The patient developed sudden facial flushing, an upper torso rash, dyspnea, palpitation, and severe hypotension about 2 min after the intravenous administration of approximately 2 mg of vitamin K. Immediate hydration and an injection of 20 mg ephedrine restored her blood pressure to the preoperative level within 5 min. The patient recovered without any sequelae, but the operation was postponed. The patient's symptoms seemed to be due to an anaphylactoid reaction or anaphylaxis following the intravenous administration of vitamin K. This case report suggests that physicians should carefully review the indications of vitamin K prior to administration, even at low doses.
Administration, Intravenous
;
Anaphylaxis
;
Blood Pressure
;
Dyspnea
;
Ephedrine
;
Exanthema
;
Female
;
Flushing
;
Humans
;
Hypotension
;
Lung
;
Middle Aged
;
Torso
;
Vitamin K
;
Vitamins*
9.Urinary Retention following Anorectal Surgery.
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 1995;28(3):456-462
Acute urinary retention is a common complication following anorectal surgery. However, the cause of this complication is poorly understood. We investigated the influence on postoperative urinary retention of age, sex, premedicants, intraoperative fluid volume administered, surgeon, operating time, type of operation, anesthetic technique in 278 patients undergoing elective surgery for benign anorectal disease by a review of the charts. The results were as follows. The overall urinary retention rate was 31.7%. Age, sex, premedicants (narcotics, anticholinergics), surgeon did not correlate with urinary retention. Increasing age was associated with a relatively high incidence of urinary retention, but the difference did not reach statistical significance (P=0.054). The variables of intraoperative fluid volume administered (>200 ml), anesthetic technique (spinal anesthesia vs. general or caudal anesthesia), type (hemorrhoidectomy, especially including multiple mucosal ligation or sphincterotomy) of the operation, and operating time (>30 min) correlated significantly with retention (P<0.05). Urinary retention was 2, 7 and 3 times more likely to occur in patients who had duration of operation more than 30 minutes, hemorrhoidectomy, and spinal anesthesia respectively. After all above variables were controlled for, duration and type of the procedure and anesthetic technique remained significantly correlated with retention (P<0.05). We concluded that operating time of more than 30 minutes, hemorrhoidectomy (especially using multiple mucosal ligations or sphincterotomy), and spinal anesthesia were significant precipitating factors, but could not determine whether age and intraoperative fluid volume administered were associated with urinary retention with this retrospective study.
Anesthesia
;
Anesthesia, Spinal
;
Hemorrhoidectomy
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Ligation
;
Precipitating Factors
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Urinary Retention*
10.A Negative Pressure Method Using a CVP Manometer for the Ascertainment of the Epidural Space .
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 1989;22(6):922-925
To identify the epidural space various methods have been recommended and the methods are divided into two major categories, either loss of resistance or negative pressure technics. A s#yringe technic to feel loss-of-resistanse is now widely used clinically due to its reliability and simplicity. However, in some instances, it is very difficult to recognize the epidural space despite using the above methods so that the need for a more safe and easier one is required. After the patient is placed in a sitting flexed position, an 18 gauge Tuohy needles is inserted epidurally at the lumbar area with a saline filled CVP manometer connected via a 3-way stopcock, then a sudden drop of pressure is usually observed and a fluctuation of the pressure can be observed in the water column of the manometer according to the changes in positions, respiration and heart beat. Although this method can be criticized because the technique is somewhat cumbersome and is difficult for retrial when the dura has been punctured, the authors appreciate the experimental values of the technic and suggest its aduantanges as follows: 1) it is a visual thchnic. 2) the measurement of epidural pressure is possible. 3) it prevents back-drip of local anesthetic solution with a 3-way stopcock. 4) it is useful as an index for determination of local anesthetic volume to be injected.
Epidural Space*
;
Heart
;
Humans
;
Needles
;
Respiration
;
Water