Abstract
Severe restrictive lung pathology following long-standing valvular disease is not uncommonly seen in developing countries. Acute restrictive pulmonary conditions, corrective surgery, and the effects of cardiopulmonary bypass add to the preexisting lung pathology. This may lead to a difficult postoperative respiratory management culminating in an inability to wean such a patient from the ventilator. We present the successful respiratory management of 3 frail patients with rheumatic heart disease and severe respiratory lung pathology, who underwent valve replacement surgery.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
References
1.
Jackon
JM
Thomas
SJ
. Valvular heart disease . In:
Kaplan
JA
, ed. Cardiac Anesthesia , 3rd ed.
Philadelphia : Saunders , 1993 :629 –80 .
2.
Benumof
JC
Alfery
DD
. Anesthesia for thoracic surgery . In:
Miller
RD
, ed. Anesthesia , 2nd ed.
New York : Churchill Livingstone , 1986 :1371 –462 .
3.
Shapiro
BA
Vender
JS
. Postoperative respiratory management . In:
Kaplan
JA
, ed. Cardiac Anesthesia , 3rd ed.
Philadelphia : Saunders , 1993 :1149 –67 .
4.
Stoelting
RK
Dierdorf
SF
McCammon
RL
. Restrictive Pulmonary disease . Anesthesia and coexisting disease . 2nd ed.
New York : Churchill Livingstone , 1988 :227 –34 .
5.
Banxzon
HT
. Post-thoracotomy epidural analgesia: lumbar or epidural placement?
J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth
1993 ;7 :515 –6 .
6.
Pedersen
J
Schurizek
BA
Melsen
NC
Juhlk
B
. Minitracheotomy in the treatment of postoperative sputum retention and atelectasis . Acta Anesth Scand
1988 ;32 :426 –8 .
