Oxidative stress occurs when reactive oxygen species (ROS) production overwhelms cell protection by antioxidants. This review is focused on general anaesthesia-induced oxidative stress because it increases the rate of complications and delays recovery after surgery. It is important to know what effects of anaesthetics to expect in terms of oxidative stress, particularly in surgical procedures with high ROS production, because their either additive or antagonistic effect may be pivotal for the outcome of surgery. In vitro and animal studies on this topic are numerous but show large variability. There are not many human studies and what we know has been learned from different surgical procedures measuring different endpoints in blood samples taken mostly before and after surgery. In these studies most intravenous anaesthetics have antioxidative properties, while volatile anaesthetics temporarily increase oxidative stress in longer surgical procedures.
Pulmonary alveolar proteinosis is a rare lung disease in which lipoproteinaceous material accumulates within the alveoli, interfering with gas exchange. The disease is classified into congenital, secondary, and acquired. The congenital form includes inborn errors of surfactant metabolism, lysinuric protein intolerance and mutations in the components of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor receptor. The main symptoms are non-specific. The radiologic appearance of pulmonary alveolar proteinosis is bilateral, symmetric and perihilar airspace consolidation. Bronchoalveolar lavage is crucial for diagnosis of the disease. There is only one ten-year-old patient with diagnosed congenital form in Croatia. What makes him different from other children in the world is that since the ninth month of his life he has been mechanically ventilated. Diagnosis of postnatal alveolar proteinosis should be considered in every infant with respiratory distress with diffuse alveolar and interstitial infiltrate.
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