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329841

Anesthetic implications for transurethral resection of prostate in a COVID-19 survivor with Stanford-A aortic dissection with acute urinary retention due to metastatic carcinoma

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Last updated: 29 Dec 2024

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Abstract

Background
Aortic dissection is a new addition to the long COVID-19 complication catalog. We report this rare and novel complication, which can be missed without a high index of suspicion in the ever-burgeoning population of COVID-survivors presenting for un-related surgery. We emphasize the importance of recording blood pressure in both the upper limbs in COVID-survivors during pre-anesthetic checkup, especially in patients with a dilated aorta on the chest radiograph to identify any interarm blood pressure discrepancy characteristic of aortic dissection. Discontinuation of antihypertensive based on low/normal blood pressure in left upper limb can precipitate concealed and catastrophic rise in blood pressure in the right upper-limb propagating the dissection of aorta to a fatal conclusion. The cardinal anesthetic consideration is to mitigate the effect of hemodynamic perturbations on the dissected aorta.
Case presentation
We report the successful management of the case of a 76-year-old male prostatic cancer patient with COVID-induced aortic-dissection and acute urinary retention, posted for transurethral resection of prostate. CT angiography revealed an intimal flap in the ascending aortic lumen and aortic arch till the origin of left subclavian artery resulting in a double-barreled aorta. An arterial line was secured in right radial artery and non-invasive blood pressure recorded in left arm simultaneously (202/60 mmHg in right upper-limb and 92/70 mmHg in the left upper-limb on wheeling into the operation theatre). He underwent transurethral prostatic resection and bilateral orchidectomy under low-dose subarachnoid block with prophylactic use of labetalol infusion.
Conclusions
The importance of recording blood pressure in both the upper limbs in COVID survivors maintaining a high index of suspicion for aortic dissection cannot be overemphasized. Transurethral prostatic resection surgery under low-dose subarachnoid block is possible under the umbrella of judicious selection and optimal use of cardiac medication with an interventional cardiologist as standby in patients with aortic dissection.

DOI

10.1186/s42077-022-00296-1

Keywords

Aortic dissection, COVID-19, Carcinoma prostate, Labetalol, Subarachnoid block

Authors

First Name

Shagun Bhatia

Last Name

Shah

MiddleName

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Affiliation

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Email

drshagun_2010@rediffmail.com

City

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Orcid

0000-0002-9178-7958

First Name

Itee

Last Name

Chowdhury

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

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Email

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City

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Orcid

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First Name

Venkatesh

Last Name

Pally

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

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Email

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City

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Orcid

-

First Name

Chamound Rai

Last Name

Jain

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

-

Email

-

City

-

Orcid

-

Volume

15

Article Issue

1

Related Issue

44743

Issue Date

2023-01-01

Receive Date

2022-12-22

Publish Date

2023-01-02

Print ISSN

1687-7934

Online ISSN

2090-925X

Link

https://asja.journals.ekb.eg/article_329841.html

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https://asja.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=329841

Order

329,841

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Ain-Shams Journal of Anesthesiology

Publication Link

https://asja.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Anesthetic implications for transurethral resection of prostate in a COVID-19 survivor with Stanford-A aortic dissection with acute urinary retention due to metastatic carcinoma prostate: a case report

Details

Type

Article

Created At

20 Dec 2024