Anesthetic management of children with medically refractory pulmonary hypertension undergoing surgical Potts shunt
Introduction Pulmonary hypertension in children is associated with high rates of adverse events under anesthesia. In children who have failed medical therapy, a posttricuspid shunt such as a Potts shunt can offload the right ventricle and possibly delay or replace the need for lung transplantation....
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Veröffentlicht in: | Pediatric anesthesia 2024-01, Vol.34 (1), p.79-85 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Introduction
Pulmonary hypertension in children is associated with high rates of adverse events under anesthesia. In children who have failed medical therapy, a posttricuspid shunt such as a Potts shunt can offload the right ventricle and possibly delay or replace the need for lung transplantation. Intraoperative management of this procedure, during which an anastomosis between the pulmonary artery and the descending aorta is created, is complex and requires a deep understanding of the pathophysiology of acute and chronic right ventricular failure. This retrospective case review describes the intraoperative management of children undergoing surgical creation of a Potts shunt at a single center.
Methods
A retrospective case review of all patients under the age of 18 who underwent Potts shunt between April 2013 and June 2022. Medical records were examined, and clinical data of demographics, intraoperative vital signs, anesthetic management, and postoperative outcomes were extracted.
Results
Twenty‐nine children with medically refractory pulmonary hypertension underwent surgical Potts shunts with a median age of 12 years (range 4 months to 17.4 years). Nineteen Potts shunts (65%) were placed via thoracotomy and 10 (35%) were placed via median sternotomy with use of cardiopulmonary bypass. Ketamine was the most frequently utilized induction agent (17 out of 29, 59%), and the majority of patients were initiated on vasopressin prior to intubation (20 out of 29, 69%). Additional inotropic support with epinephrine (45%), milrinone (28%), norepinephrine (17%), and dobutamine (14%) was used prior to shunt placement. Following opening of the Potts shunt, hemodynamic support was continued with vasopressin (66%), epinephrine (62%), milrinone (59%), dobutamine (14%), and norepinephrine (10%). Major intraoperative complications included severe hypoxemia (21 out of 29, 72%) and hypotension requiring boluses of epinephrine (10 out of 29, 34.5%) but no patient suffered intraoperative cardiac arrest. There were four in‐hospital mortalities.
Discussion
A Potts shunt offers another palliative option for children with medically refractory pulmonary hypertension. General anesthesia in these children carries high risk for pulmonary hypertensive crises. Anesthesiologists must understand underlying physiological mechanisms responsble for acute hemodynaic decompensation during acute pulmonary hypertneisve crises. Severe physiological perturbations imposed by thoracic surgery and use |
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ISSN: | 1155-5645 1460-9592 |
DOI: | 10.1111/pan.14764 |