1.What anesthesiologists ask to know and should know about the neuromuscular monitoring: an updated review.
Anesthesia and Pain Medicine 2017;12(1):1-8
The increase in mortality and morbidity associated with the use of muscle relaxants, is associated with a lack of clinical pharmacological knowledge of the drugs, and a lack of understanding the risk of postoperative residual curarization. This is due to the absence of standards for neuromuscular monitoring. Clinicians experienced in neuromuscular monitoring and using muscle relaxants in the clinic may have some queries regarding the monitoring: Why should neuromuscular monitoring be done? Are clinical tests really not effective? Why is it not good when I actually perform neuromuscular monitoring? Would using sugammadex not require neuromuscular monitoring? This review answers most of the questions that many clinicians have, and also forwards the knowledge required of clinicians.
Delayed Emergence from Anesthesia
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Mortality
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Muscle Relaxation
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Neuromuscular Monitoring*
2.Seizure and delayed emergence from anesthesia resulting from remote cerebellar hemorrhage after lumbar spine surgery: A case report.
Hyun Young LEE ; Sang Hun KIM ; Keum Young SO
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2012;63(3):270-273
A patient with remote cerebellar hemorrhage (RCH) who was presented at the authors' hospital with seizure and delayed emergence from anesthesia after loss of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) through a dural tear during lumbar spine surgery is described. RCH is a rare and unpredictable complication after spinal surgery. Its most common clinical features are diminished consciousness, headache, and seizure. Its mechanism is still disputed, but is probably venous bleeding secondary to significant intra- or post-operative loss of CSF. Therefore, RCH must be considered in patients with unexplained mental deterioration or disturbance upon emergence and seizure from general anesthesia after spine surgery.
Anesthesia, General
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Consciousness
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Delayed Emergence from Anesthesia
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Headache
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Hemorrhage
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Humans
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Lumbosacral Region
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Seizures
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Spine
3.Delayed emergence from anesthesia resulting from posterior cerebral artery infarction after Guglielmi detachable coil embolization.
Chan Woo CHO ; Byung Gun KIM ; Hyo Seok NA ; Eun Su CHOI ; Young Tae JEON
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2013;65(6 Suppl):S113-S114
No abstract available.
Delayed Emergence from Anesthesia*
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Embolization, Therapeutic*
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Infarction, Posterior Cerebral Artery*
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Posterior Cerebral Artery*
4.Delayed emergence from anesthesia resulting from posterior cerebral artery infarction after Guglielmi detachable coil embolization.
Chan Woo CHO ; Byung Gun KIM ; Hyo Seok NA ; Eun Su CHOI ; Young Tae JEON
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2013;65(6 Suppl):S113-S114
No abstract available.
Delayed Emergence from Anesthesia*
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Embolization, Therapeutic*
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Infarction, Posterior Cerebral Artery*
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Posterior Cerebral Artery*
5.Feasibility of Perioperative Diaphragmatic Ultrasound in Assessment of Residual Neuromuscular Blockade.
Acta Academiae Medicinae Sinicae 2021;43(2):205-210
Objective To evaluate the relationship between diaphragmatic ultrasound and postoperative residual neuromuscular blockade(PRNB). Methods The patients undergoing non-thoracic and abdominal surgery under general anesthesia from August to October in 2019 were randomly enrolled from Peking Union Medical College Hospital.Diaphragmatic ultrasound was acquired pre-operation and post extubation.A 4-15 MHz probe was used to measure diaphragmatic thickness at the intersection point of 8-9 intercostal space with right anterior axillary line at the end of inspiration and expiration during quiet breathing and deep breathing(DB),and the diaphragmatic thickness fraction(DTF)was calculated.A 1-5 MHz probe was used to measure diaphragmatic excursion(DE)at the intersection point of right costal margin with midaxillary line during quiet breathing and DB.Train of four ratio(TOFr)was recorded for neuromuscular monitoring.TOFr,observer assessment of alertness and sedation score at extubation,Aldrete score at postanesthesia care unit,and postoperative pulmonary complication were recorded. Results The PRNB rate was 54.7%.The DTF-DB [31.3(21.1,45.0)vs.38.5(26.6,53.9),P=0.045] and DE-DB(2.9±1.4 vs.4.1±1.0,P<0.001)in PRNB group was lower than those in the group without PRNB.DTF-DB(r=0.351,P=0.002)and DE-DB(r=0.580,P<0.001)were correlated with TOFr. Conclusion Perioperative diaphragmatic ultrasound may be helpful for the diagnosis of PRNB.
Delayed Emergence from Anesthesia
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Diaphragm/diagnostic imaging*
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Feasibility Studies
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Humans
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Prospective Studies
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Ultrasonography
6.Postoperative negative pressure pulmonary edema following repetitive laryngospasm even after reversal of neuromuscular blockade by sugammadex: a case report.
Ji Hyeon LEE ; Jae Ho LEE ; Min Hyun LEE ; Hyun Oh CHO ; Soon Eun PARK
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2017;70(1):95-99
Laryngospasm, an occlusion of the glottis, can occur at any time during anesthesia, and is associated with serious perioperative complications such as hypoxia, hypercabia, aspiration, bronchospasm, arrhythmia, prolonged recovery, cardiac collapse, and eventually catastrophic death. Importantly, postoperative negative pressure pulmonary edema (NPPE) is a rare, but well described life-threatening complication related to acute and chronic upper airway obstruction. Sugammadex well known for affirmatively reducing the postoperative pulmonary complications associated with residual neuromuscular blockade may have an indirect role in triggering the negative intrathoracic pressure by raising a rapid and efficacious respiratory muscle strength in acute upper airway obstruction. Herein, we report a case of postoperative NPPE following repetitive laryngospasm even after reversal of rocuronium-induced neuromuscular blockade using sugammadex.
Airway Obstruction
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Anesthesia
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Anoxia
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Arrhythmias, Cardiac
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Bronchial Spasm
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Delayed Emergence from Anesthesia
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Glottis
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Laryngismus*
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Neuromuscular Blockade*
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Pulmonary Edema*
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Respiratory Muscles
7.Comparison of sugammadex and pyridostigmine bromide for reversal of rocuronium-induced neuromuscular blockade in short-term pediatric surgery: a prospective randomized study
Jihyun AN ; Eunju KIM ; Jihyang LEE ; Hyun KIM ; Jongcheol SON ; Joonyoung HUH ; Kyeongyoon WOO
Anesthesia and Pain Medicine 2019;14(3):288-293
BACKGROUND: Sugammadex reverses rocuronium-induced neuromuscular blockade quickly and effectively. Herein, we compared the efficacy of sugammadex and pyridostigmine in the reversal of rocuronium-induced light block or minimal block in pediatric patients scheduled for elective entropion surgery. METHODS: A prospective randomized study was conducted in 60 pediatric patients aged 2–11 years who were scheduled for entropion surgery under sevoflurane anesthesia. Neuromuscular blockade was achieved by administration of 0.6 mg/kg rocuronium and assessed using the train-of-four (TOF) technique. Patients were randomly assigned to 2 groups receiving either sugammadex 2 mg/kg or pyridostigmine 0.2 mg/kg and glycopyrrolate 0.01 mg/kg at the end of surgery. Primary outcomes were time from administration of reversal agents to TOF ratio 0.9 and TOF ratio 1.0. Time from the administration of reversal agents to extubation and postoperative adverse events were also recorded. RESULTS: There were no significant differences in the demographic variables. Time from the administration of reversal agents to TOF ratio 0.9 and TOF ratio 1.0 were significantly shorter in the sugammadex group than in the pyridostigmine plus glycopyrrolate group: 1.30 ± 0.84 vs. 3.53 ± 2.73 min (P < 0.001) and 2.75 ± 1.00 vs. 5.73 ± 2.83 min (P < 0.001), respectively. Extubation time was shorter in the sugammadex group. Adverse events, such as skin rash, nausea, vomiting, and postoperative residual neuromuscular blockade (airway obstruction), were not statistically different between the two groups. CONCLUSIONS: Sugammadex provided more rapid reversal of rocuronium-induced neuromuscular blockade in pediatric patients undergoing surgery than did pyridostigmine plus glycopyrrolate.
Anesthesia
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Delayed Emergence from Anesthesia
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Entropion
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Exanthema
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Glycopyrrolate
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Humans
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Nausea
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Neuromuscular Blockade
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Neuromuscular Monitoring
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Pediatrics
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Prospective Studies
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Pyridostigmine Bromide
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Vomiting
8.A computed tomography image segmentation algorithm for improving the diagnostic accuracy of rectal cancer based on U-net and residual block.
Hao WANG ; Bangning JI ; Gang HE ; Wenxin YU
Journal of Biomedical Engineering 2022;39(1):166-174
As an important basis for lesion determination and diagnosis, medical image segmentation has become one of the most important and hot research fields in the biomedical field, among which medical image segmentation algorithms based on full convolutional neural network and U-Net neural network have attracted more and more attention by researchers. At present, there are few reports on the application of medical image segmentation algorithms in the diagnosis of rectal cancer, and the accuracy of the segmentation results of rectal cancer is not high. In this paper, a convolutional network model of encoding and decoding combined with image clipping and pre-processing is proposed. On the basis of U-Net, this model replaced the traditional convolution block with the residual block, which effectively avoided the problem of gradient disappearance. In addition, the image enlargement method is also used to improve the generalization ability of the model. The test results on the data set provided by the "Teddy Cup" Data Mining Challenge showed that the residual block-based improved U-Net model proposed in this paper, combined with image clipping and preprocessing, could greatly improve the segmentation accuracy of rectal cancer, and the Dice coefficient obtained reached 0.97 on the verification set.
Algorithms
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Delayed Emergence from Anesthesia
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Humans
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Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
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Rectal Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging*
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Tomography, X-Ray Computed
9.Severe neurologic manifestations in acute intermittent porphyria developed after spine surgery under general anesthesia: a case report.
Eun Young PARK ; Yi Seul KIM ; Kyung Jee LIM ; Hye Kyoung LEE ; Soo Kyung LEE ; Hyun CHOI ; Mae Hwa KANG
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2014;67(3):217-220
Porphyrias are inherited metabolic disorders resulting from a specific enzyme defect in the heme biosynthetic pathway. Porphyrias are induced by various precipitants. Clinical features include abdominal pain, neurologic manifestations, autonomic neuropathy, and mental disturbance. Diagnosis may be delayed because of variable symptoms that mimic other diseases and because of the rarity of of porphyrias. Although most patients with known porphyria can complete anesthesia and surgery safely, undiagnosed porphyric patients are in danger of porphyric crisis due to inadvertent exposure to precipitating drugs and environment. We report a case of a patient who experienced delayed emergence with neurological disturbance after general anesthesia, ultimately diagnosed as acute intermittent porphyria.
Abdominal Pain
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Anesthesia
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Anesthesia, General*
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Biosynthetic Pathways
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Delayed Emergence from Anesthesia
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Diagnosis
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Guillain-Barre Syndrome
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Heme
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Humans
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Neurologic Manifestations*
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Porphyria, Acute Intermittent*
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Porphyrias
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Spine*
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Wernicke Encephalopathy
10.Initial experience with the unrestricted introduction of sugammadex at a large academic medical center: a retrospective observational study examining postoperative mechanical ventilation and efficiency outcomes.
Vikas N O'REILLY-SHAH ; Grant C LYNDE ; Matthew L MITCHELL ; Carla L MAFFEO ; Craig S JABALEY ; Francis A WOLF
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology 2018;71(5):374-385
BACKGROUND: Sugammadex rapidly reverses deep neuromuscular blockade, but owing to cost, questions remain about its optimal utilization. After the unrestricted introduction of sugammadex at Emory University Hospital, we hypothesized that reductions would be demonstrated in the primary outcome of post-anesthesia care unit (PACU) mechanical ventilation (MV) and secondary outcomes of PACU length of stay (LOS) and emergence time (surgery end to anesthesia end time in the PACU). METHODS: This retrospective observational study included patients undergoing general anesthesia over a 12-month period. Using multiple variable penalized logistic regression in a one-group before-and-after design, we compared the categorized rates of PACU MV to examine the effect of sugammadex introduction following a post-hoc chart review to ascertain the reason for postoperative MV. Additionally, multiple variable linear regression was used to assess for differences in PACU LOS and emergence time within a propensity-matched set of patients receiving neostigmine or sugammadex. RESULTS: In total, 7,217 surgical cases met the inclusion criteria: 3,798 before and 3,419 after sugammadex introduction. The incidence of PACU MV was 2.3% before and 1.8% after (P = 0.118) sugammadex introduction. PACU MV due to residual neuromuscular blockade (rNMB) decreased from 0.63% to 0.20% (P = 0.005). Ventilation because of other causes was unchanged. PACU LOS and emergence time were unchanged in the propensity-matched set of 1,444 patients. CONCLUSIONS: rNMB was an important contributor to PACU MV utilization and its incidence significantly decreased after sugammadex introduction. The selected efficiency measures may not have been sufficiently granular to identify improvements following introduction.
Academic Medical Centers*
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Anesthesia
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Anesthesia, General
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Delayed Emergence from Anesthesia
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Humans
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Incidence
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Length of Stay
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Linear Models
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Logistic Models
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Neostigmine
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Neuromuscular Blockade
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Observational Study*
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Respiration, Artificial*
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Retrospective Studies*
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Ventilation