The evaluation of the SVmR provides useful information for determining the optimal anesthetic depth for laryngoscopy and intubation in individual patients.
Laser Doppler flowmetry (LDF) was conducted on familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy (FAP) patients and asymptomatic carriers of FAP. Vasoconstrictive responses in the 11 FAP patients tested, induced by deep inspiration, were markedly depressed compared with those of the healthy controls. The responses decreased with the progression of FAP, with no responses being elicited from the 7 patients in stages 2 (moderate) to 4 (terminal). Interestingly, vasoconstrictive responses following deep inspiration also were depressed in 3 of 4 asymptomatic carriers of FAP who showed no clinical sign of FAP, and who had normal sensory nerve conduction velocity. Patients who had such diseases as Shy-Drager's disease, spinocelebellar degeneration, and pandysautonomia showed no decrease in blood flow for various stimulations. In contrast, patients with primary amyloidosis, who had no autonomic dysfunction, showed a normal pattern. Detection of the autonomic functions in FAP patients and asymptomatic carriers by capsule polyhydrography and computer analysis of the cardiographic R-R interval revealed that the asymptomatic carriers of FAP, as well as the FAP patients, had disordered peripheral autonomic functions. Our results suggest that the autonomic nervous system is first affected during the very early stage of FAP.
Electrocardiogram (ECG) abnormalities secondary to subarachnoid hemorrhage are well known, but the etiology remains unclear. Transient left ventricular apical ballooning syndrome is characterized by acute onset myocardial infarction-like symptoms, transient (reversible) cardiac dysfunction, and shapes resembling ampulla on left ventriculography. We managed general anesthesia for two patients with transient left ventricular apical ballooning and ECG abnormalities associated with subarachnoid hemorrhage. During anesthesia, their hemodynamic status was almost stable although their cardiac performance analyzed by transthoracic echocardiography and transesophageal cardiography was poor. Anesthetic management of this syndrome may be simplified if less cardiosuppressive anesthetic management is used. We recommend evaluating cardiac function with transthoracic echocardiography or transesophageal cardiography when an subarachnoid hemorrhage patient has ECG abnormalities.
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