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Authors
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
1.Pre-assessment data of the patient
A 2-year-old boy, weighing 15 kg was admitted with a history of limited mouth opening(inter-incisor distance of 6 mm), hypoplastic and retrognathic mandible (bird face deformity) and facial asymmetry from left temporomandibular joint ankylosis (TMJA).
He was born at term, after an uneventful pregnancy, and there was no report of trauma
during caesarean section. No other possible aetiologies were identified. He was
scheduled for mandibular osteotomy. Preoperative ENT examination revealed
adenotonsillar hypertrophy.
2. Anaesthetic Plan
A fiberoptic nasal intubation was performed under deep inhalation anaesthesia with
sevoflurane, with the patient breathing spontaneously. Midazolam (0.05 mg.kg-1) and
alfentanil (0.03 mg.kg-1) were given and anaesthesia was maintained with O2/air and
sevoflurane. No neuromuscular blocking agent was administered since the surgical team
needed facial nerve monitoring.
3. Description of incident
During surgery an accidental extubation occurred and an attempt was made to reintubate the trachea by direct laryngoscopy. Although the osteotomy was nearly completed, the vocal cords could not be visualized (Cormack-Lehane grade IV
laryngoscopic view).
4. Solving the problem
Re-intubation was finally accomplished with the flexible fiberscope and the procedure
was concluded without any more incidents. Extubation was performed 24 hours
postoperatively with the patient fully awake. After surgery mouth opening improved to inter-incisor gap of 15 mm.
5. Lessons learned and take home message
Two airways issues present in this case can lead to difficultventilation and intubation:
TMJA and adenotonsillar hypertrophy. These difficulties were anticipated and managed
accordingly. The accidental extubation brought to our attention the fact that, even after surgical correction, this airway remains challenging. Even with intensive jaw stretchingexercises there is a high incidence of re-ankylosis, especially in younger patients. One should bear that in mind when anaesthetizing patients with TMJA.
Description
Keywords
Anquilose Temporomandibular Dificuldade Respiratória Anestesia HDE ANS
Pedagogical Context
Citation
IN: 3rd Annual Congress of the European Society of Paediatric Anaesthesiology; 2011, 22 a 24 Setembro. Palma de Maiorca, Espanha
Publisher
Serviço de Anestesiologia, Hospital de Dona Estefânia, Centro Hospitalar de Lisboa, EPE