The Japanese Epidemiologic Study for Perioperative Anaphylaxis, a prospective nationwide study: clinical signs, severity, and therapeutic agents

Diagnosis of perioperative anaphylaxis is difficult because of its non-specific and variable signs and symptoms. Therapeutic agents used to treat anaphylaxis and anaesthesiologist responses also vary depending on the case, which might affect outcomes; however, only a few studies have focused on thes...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of anaesthesia : BJA 2023-07, Vol.131 (1), p.170-177
Hauptverfasser: Sugiyama, Yuki, Takazawa, Tomonori, Watanabe, Natsuko, Bito, Kiyoko, Fujiyoshi, Tetsuhiro, Hamaguchi, Shinsuke, Haraguchi, Takashi, Horiuchi, Tatsuo, Kamiya, Yoshinori, Maruyama, Noboru, Masumo, Hitoshi, Nakazawa, Harumasa, Nagumo, Kazuhiro, Orihara, Masaki, Sato, Jun, Sekimoto, Kenichi, Takahashi, Kenichiro, Uchiyama, Mutsumi, Takahashi, Kazunobu, Yamaguchi, Masao, Kawamata, Mikito
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Diagnosis of perioperative anaphylaxis is difficult because of its non-specific and variable signs and symptoms. Therapeutic agents used to treat anaphylaxis and anaesthesiologist responses also vary depending on the case, which might affect outcomes; however, only a few studies have focused on these factors. This prospective study of perioperative anaphylaxis, a part of the Japanese Epidemiologic Study for Perioperative Anaphylaxis, investigated the clinical signs, its severity, therapeutic drugs, epinephrine administration, and anaesthesiologist responses in cases of perioperative anaphylaxis to assess trends and variability. Shock index was used to assess severity of cardiovascular collapse. In 43 patients analysed in this study, cardiovascular signs (88.4%) were the most frequent, followed by skin (81.4%) and respiratory signs (60.5%). The presence of signs increased during the clinical course. The median time from the first signs to diagnosis of anaphylaxis was 10 (5.0–17.8) min. The rates of epinephrine use were 30.2% (unused), 48.8% (i.v.), and 20.9% (i.m.). The median time from diagnosis of anaphylaxis to epinephrine administration was 7 (inter-quartile range: 1.5–8.0) min. Antihistamines and corticosteroids were each used in 69.8% of cases. The worst shock index was higher in patients who received i.v. epinephrine (2.77 [0.90] mean [standard deviation]) than in both no epinephrine use cases (1.35 [0.41]) and i.m. epinephrine cases (1.89 [0.77] (P
ISSN:0007-0912
1471-6771
DOI:10.1016/j.bja.2023.02.023