PMID: 22338870Feb 22, 2012Paper

Anesthetic management of a patient with Rett syndrome associated with trismus and apnea attacks

Masui. The Japanese journal of anesthesiology
Eri KawasakiKazuo Ushijima

Abstract

Rett syndrome (RTT) is a congenital neurological disorder associated with mutations in the gene encoding MECP2 on the X chromosome. An 18-year-old woman (150 cm in height and 29 kg in weight) had been diagnosed with RTT and showed myotonic trismus, frequent attacks of apnea, mental retardation, spastic paraplegia, scoliosis, and microcephalus with micrognathia. She was scheduled to undergo laparoscopic fundoplication and gastrostomy under general anesthesia. Nasal bronchofiberscopic intubation (BFI) was planned because difficult airway due to trismus and micrognathia was expected. Referring to the bispectral index (BIS), anesthesia was induced with intermittent intravenous thiopental (total 125 mg), resulting in successful opening of the mouth by 1.5 of a finger width and establishment of manual ventilation. Following intravenous administration of rocuronium (20 mg), oral BFI was easily accomplished despite Cormack grade III. Anesthesia was satisfactorily maintained with inhalation of sevoflurane (1.0-1.5%) and continuous infusion of remifentanil (0.1-0.2 microg x kg(-1) x min(-1)) with the BIS value ranging from 30 to 50. She recovered smoothly from anesthesia using sugammadex (50 mg). However, she immediately demonstrated tri...Continue Reading

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