Tratamiento anestésico de un paciente diagnosticado de CADASIL (arteriopatía cerebral autosómica dominante con infartos subcorticales y leucoencefalopatía) / Anesthetic management of a patient diagnosed with CADASIL (cerebral arteriopathy, autosomal dominant, with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy)
Rev. esp. anestesiol. reanim
; Rev. esp. anestesiol. reanim;59(2): 102-106, feb. 2012.
Article
in Es
| IBECS
| ID: ibc-100345
Responsible library:
ES1.1
Localization: BNCS
RESUMEN
CADASIL (arteriopatía cerebral autosómica dominante, con infartos subcorticales y leucoencefalopatía) es una enfermedad hereditaria poco frecuente que puede tener implicaciones anestesiológicas, escasamente comunicadas. Presentamos el caso de un varón, previamente diagnosticado de CADASIL, que había sufrido un accidente cerebrovascular isquémico, con resonancia magnética compatible con leucoencefalopatía, y estaba muy limitado para las actividades diarias, con demencia, alteraciones del comportamiento, apatía e incontinencia urinaria. Entre sus antecedentes familiares, había varios parientes con síntomas psiquiátricos y accidentes cerebrovasculares, como su padre, dos hermanos y una hermana. Programado para artrodesis de la rodilla izquierda por complicaciones infecciosas tras cirugía de prótesis de rodilla, estaba tomando clopidogrel, que había suspendido 7 días antes. Se empleó anestesia combinada epidural-subaracnoidea y sedación intraoperatoria con midazolam, así como analgesia multimodal en el postoperatorio que incluyó analgesia epidural. No hubo incidencias notables. La anestesia y la analgesia epidurales permitieron mantener la estabilidad hemodinámica para una perfusión cerebral adecuada, clave para no empeorar los efectos de la arteriopatía crónica en la CADASIL(AU)
ABSTRACT
CADASIL (cerebral arteriopathy, autosomal dominant, with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy) is an infrequent inherited disease that could have anesthetic implications. However these have rarely been reported. We present a male patient previously diagnosed with CADASIL, who had suffered an ischemic vascular cerebral accident with a MRI compatible with leukoencephalopathy, and who was dependent for daily activities, and sustained dementia, mood alterations, apathy, and urine incontinence. He had familial antecedents of psychiatric symptoms and ischemic stroke events in several relatives including his father, two brothers and one sister. He was scheduled for arthrodesis of the left knee because of multiple infectious complications of prosthetic knee surgery. He was under clopidogrel treatment which was withdrawn seven days before surgery. The procedure was performed under combined spinal-epidural anesthesia, intraoperative sedation with midazolam, and postoperative multimodal analgesia including epidural patient controlled analgesia. The perioperative management was uneventful and we outline the adequacy of managing these patients under regional anesthesia and analgesia, as these permit to maintain hemodynamic stability leading to adequate cerebral perfusion, key to avoid an increase in the effects of the chronic arteriopathy patients with CADASIL sustain(AU)
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Collection:
06-national
/
ES
Database:
IBECS
Main subject:
Arterial Occlusive Diseases
/
Midazolam
/
Combined Modality Therapy
/
Anesthesiology
Type of study:
Diagnostic_studies
Limits:
Child
/
Female
/
Humans
Language:
Es
Journal:
Rev. esp. anestesiol. reanim
Year:
2012
Document type:
Article