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Successful Management of a Patient with Intraoperative Bleeding of More than 80,000 mL and Usefulness of QTc Monitoring for Calcium Correction

Intraoperative massive bleeding is associated with high rates of mortality and anesthetic management of massive bleeding is challenging because it is necessary to achieve volume resuscitation and electrolyte correction simultaneously during massive transfusion. We report a case of life-threatening b...

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Autores principales: Sugiyama, Yuki, Aiba, Kazuma, Arai, Nariaki, Ito, Mariko, Urasawa, Masatoshi, Hirose, Chie, Murakami, Ikuko, Tanaka, Ryusuke, Yamada, Tomokatsu, Iida, Keisuke, Nakamura, Hiroyuki, Kawamata, Mikito
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8062170/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33936817
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/6635696
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author Sugiyama, Yuki
Aiba, Kazuma
Arai, Nariaki
Ito, Mariko
Urasawa, Masatoshi
Hirose, Chie
Murakami, Ikuko
Tanaka, Ryusuke
Yamada, Tomokatsu
Iida, Keisuke
Nakamura, Hiroyuki
Kawamata, Mikito
author_facet Sugiyama, Yuki
Aiba, Kazuma
Arai, Nariaki
Ito, Mariko
Urasawa, Masatoshi
Hirose, Chie
Murakami, Ikuko
Tanaka, Ryusuke
Yamada, Tomokatsu
Iida, Keisuke
Nakamura, Hiroyuki
Kawamata, Mikito
author_sort Sugiyama, Yuki
collection PubMed
description Intraoperative massive bleeding is associated with high rates of mortality and anesthetic management of massive bleeding is challenging because it is necessary to achieve volume resuscitation and electrolyte correction simultaneously during massive transfusion. We report a case of life-threatening bleeding of more than 80,000 mL during liver transplantation in which real-time QTc monitoring was useful for an extremely large amount of calcium administration for treatment of hypocalcemia. A 47-year-old female with a giant liver due to polycystic liver disease was scheduled to undergo liver transplantation. During surgery, life-threatening massive bleeding occurred. The maximum rate of blood loss was approximately 15,000 mL/hr and the total amount of estimated blood loss was 81,600 mL. It was extremely difficult to maintain blood pressure and a risk of cardiac arrest continued due to hypotension. In addition, even though administration of insulin and calcium was performed, electrolyte disturbances of hyperkalemia and hypocalcemia with prolongation of QTc interval occurred. At that time, we visually noticed that the QT interval was shortened in response to bolus calcium administration, and we used the change of real-time QTc interval as a supportive indicator for calcium correction. This monitoring allowed for us to administer calcium at an unusually high rate, by which progression of hypocalcemia was prevented. Levels of hemoglobin and coagulation factors were preserved both by restriction of crystalloid infusion and by a massive transfusion protocol. The patient was extubated without pulmonary edema or cardiac overload and was finally discharged without any sequelae. Intensive and cooperative management for massive transfusion and electrolyte correction using QTc monitoring was considered to be a key for successful management.
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spelling pubmed-80621702021-04-29 Successful Management of a Patient with Intraoperative Bleeding of More than 80,000 mL and Usefulness of QTc Monitoring for Calcium Correction Sugiyama, Yuki Aiba, Kazuma Arai, Nariaki Ito, Mariko Urasawa, Masatoshi Hirose, Chie Murakami, Ikuko Tanaka, Ryusuke Yamada, Tomokatsu Iida, Keisuke Nakamura, Hiroyuki Kawamata, Mikito Case Rep Anesthesiol Case Report Intraoperative massive bleeding is associated with high rates of mortality and anesthetic management of massive bleeding is challenging because it is necessary to achieve volume resuscitation and electrolyte correction simultaneously during massive transfusion. We report a case of life-threatening bleeding of more than 80,000 mL during liver transplantation in which real-time QTc monitoring was useful for an extremely large amount of calcium administration for treatment of hypocalcemia. A 47-year-old female with a giant liver due to polycystic liver disease was scheduled to undergo liver transplantation. During surgery, life-threatening massive bleeding occurred. The maximum rate of blood loss was approximately 15,000 mL/hr and the total amount of estimated blood loss was 81,600 mL. It was extremely difficult to maintain blood pressure and a risk of cardiac arrest continued due to hypotension. In addition, even though administration of insulin and calcium was performed, electrolyte disturbances of hyperkalemia and hypocalcemia with prolongation of QTc interval occurred. At that time, we visually noticed that the QT interval was shortened in response to bolus calcium administration, and we used the change of real-time QTc interval as a supportive indicator for calcium correction. This monitoring allowed for us to administer calcium at an unusually high rate, by which progression of hypocalcemia was prevented. Levels of hemoglobin and coagulation factors were preserved both by restriction of crystalloid infusion and by a massive transfusion protocol. The patient was extubated without pulmonary edema or cardiac overload and was finally discharged without any sequelae. Intensive and cooperative management for massive transfusion and electrolyte correction using QTc monitoring was considered to be a key for successful management. Hindawi 2021-04-15 /pmc/articles/PMC8062170/ /pubmed/33936817 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/6635696 Text en Copyright © 2021 Yuki Sugiyama et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Case Report
Sugiyama, Yuki
Aiba, Kazuma
Arai, Nariaki
Ito, Mariko
Urasawa, Masatoshi
Hirose, Chie
Murakami, Ikuko
Tanaka, Ryusuke
Yamada, Tomokatsu
Iida, Keisuke
Nakamura, Hiroyuki
Kawamata, Mikito
Successful Management of a Patient with Intraoperative Bleeding of More than 80,000 mL and Usefulness of QTc Monitoring for Calcium Correction
title Successful Management of a Patient with Intraoperative Bleeding of More than 80,000 mL and Usefulness of QTc Monitoring for Calcium Correction
title_full Successful Management of a Patient with Intraoperative Bleeding of More than 80,000 mL and Usefulness of QTc Monitoring for Calcium Correction
title_fullStr Successful Management of a Patient with Intraoperative Bleeding of More than 80,000 mL and Usefulness of QTc Monitoring for Calcium Correction
title_full_unstemmed Successful Management of a Patient with Intraoperative Bleeding of More than 80,000 mL and Usefulness of QTc Monitoring for Calcium Correction
title_short Successful Management of a Patient with Intraoperative Bleeding of More than 80,000 mL and Usefulness of QTc Monitoring for Calcium Correction
title_sort successful management of a patient with intraoperative bleeding of more than 80,000 ml and usefulness of qtc monitoring for calcium correction
topic Case Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8062170/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33936817
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/6635696
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