Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

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Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH

Transcript of Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Page 1: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Malignant Hyperthermia

Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPCDept of Anesthesia, PAH

Page 2: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Overview

• What is it?• Why is it?• Who gets it?• How do you recognize it?• How do you treat it?• What to do if patient is

susceptible?

Page 3: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

1960 First case described

1962 Inherited component suggested

1960’s Toronto and Wisconsin MH families identified / similarity to PSS recognized

1971 International symposium Toronto

1971 CHCT muscle biopsy described

1975 Dantrolene found to be specific treatment (FDA approved 1979)

1981-82 Patient advocacy groups formed

1980’s Use of intraoperative capnography helps early detection

1990’s RYR1 gene mutation discovered (100% PSS, 50% MH)

2000’s Genetic testing available

Page 4: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Resources at hand

• MH hotline: 1-800-644-9737• Outside USA: +1-303-389-1647• Website: www.mhaus.org• Wall flow chart from MHAUS• There’s an app for that (ePocrates,

Gas Guide, MHapp)

Page 5: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

What is MH?

• Potentially fatal inherited disease• Fever, rigidity, acidosis• Hypermetabolic state of skeletal

muscles with high intracellular calcium levels

• Triggered by exposure to volatile anesthetics and / or succinylcholine

Page 6: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Why is it?

• It’s complicated!• Uncontrolled release of calcium by

the ryanodine receptor in the terminal cisternae of the sarcoplasmic reticulum

Page 7: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.
Page 8: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Intracellular hypercalcemia

• Increased calcium release• Decreased calcium uptake• Defect in the muscle membrane• Altered function / structure of

proteins & fatty acids

Page 9: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Trigger agents

• Volatile anesthetic gases (sevo, des, etc)

• Succinylcholine

Page 10: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Safe drugs in MH

• N20• Nondepolarizing relaxants (roc,

vec, atracurium etc)• Local anesthetics• Narcotics • Sedative hypnotics (midaz,

propofol etc)

Page 11: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Who gets it?

• 1:50,000 adult GAs• 1:15,000 pediatric GAs• Incidence rising due to better

awareness but mortality declining (overall 10%)

• Inherited as autosomal dominant with variable penetrance

Page 12: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Conditions associated with MH

• Central core disease• Myotonia flutuans• King or King-Denborough

myopathy• Osteogenesis imperfecta• Heat / exercise syndromes?

Page 13: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Other conditions

• Muscular dystrophy (hyperkalemia after sux but not MH)

• Pheochromocytoma & thyrotoxicosis show hypermetabolism but not MH

• Neuroleptic malignant syndrome (related to phenothiazine exposure over long term causing dopamine depletion)

Page 14: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

How to recognize it?

• Classically presents in OR• Tachycardia• Tachypnea• Hypertension• Arrhythmias• Rigidity• Hyperthermia

Page 15: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

As the crisis develops….

• Rising ET CO2• CO2 absorbent gets hot• Skin colour mottled or cyanotic• Sweating• Mixed respiratory & metabolic

acidosis• Elevated K, lactate, myoglobin, CK

Page 16: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Later…..

• Myoglobinuric renal failure• DIC• Death

Page 17: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Variable presentations

• Delay in onset until emergence, PAR or ward

• Masseter muscle rigidity• Several uneventful GA’s in the

past, then MH occurs during current GA

Page 18: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Diagnostic tests

• Caffeine halothane contracture test is the gold standard (muscle biopsy)

• 5 centres in North America perform the accepted protocol (Toronto is only one in Canada listed on MHAUS website)

• Genetic testing (2 centres in USA listed on MHAUS website)

Page 19: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Problems with testing

• False negative (had MH after testing negative)

• More than one gene mutation may cause MH because only 50% to 80% of MH susceptible patients have RYR 1 variant or mutation

Page 20: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

How to treat?

• Early diagnosis and treatment result in very low mortality

• Any location where anesthetics are administered should have MH plan & sufficient dantrolene

• MH cart, practice drills, wall chart with hotline number

Page 21: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

MH treatment memory aid

• Some • Hot• Dude• Better• Give• Iced• Fluids• Fast

Page 22: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Acute phase

• Call for help & get the MH cart / crash cart

• Declare an emergency• Stop the triggering agents• Hyperventilate with high flow 100% O2• Switch to non triggering anesthesia to

finish the surgery if needed / change circuit?

• Dantrolene

Page 23: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Dantrolene

• Need help to mix• Initial dose 2.5 mg/kg (175 mg)• Each bottle is 20 mg = 9 bottles for first

dose• Each bottle mixed with 60 ml H2O =

540 ml water for 9 bottles• Acts by reducing intracellular calcium in

skeletal muscles

Page 24: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Acute Episode (cont’d)

• Cool patient (goal = 38)• ABG, lytes results guide further

treatment for metab & resp acidosis, hyperkalemia

• Arrhythmias respond to correction of hypercapnia, hyperkalemia & acidosis

• CK level, myoglobin

Page 25: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Afterwards, monitor for….

• Recrudescence (25% of patients)• DIC• Myoglobinuric renal failure

Page 26: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

In ICU:

• Dantrolene 1mg/kg q6hr x 24-36 hours then orally?

• EKG, art line, urinary catheter, temperature, 2nd IV line

• CVC?, capnography?• Monitor & treatment for specific

abnormalities

Page 27: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

ICU care (cont’d)

• Refer patient & family to MH centre for testing

• Recommend registry in MHAUS data base

• Recommend Medic Alert bracelet

Page 28: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

ABC’s

• A: • Aware of recrudescence • Ask relatives anesthesia / neuromusc

disease history• B:• Biopsy• C: • Contact MHAUS

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ABC’s + D

• D:• Dantrolene 1 mg/kg IV q6h x 24 -

36 hrs• Documentation to MHAUS registry

Page 30: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Management of MH susceptible patient

• Refer to anesthesia consult clinic• Prophylaxis with dantrolene?• Hospital setting vs private clinic?• GA vs local / regional?

Page 31: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

GA in MH susceptible

• Flush gas machine / remove vaporizers / new circuit & CO2 absorber

• Monitor ETCO2 & temp• MH cart ready & nearby• TIVA with propofol +/- N2O +/-

nondepolarizing NMB + narcotics = non trigger anesthesia

• Use high fresh gas flow

Page 32: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

MH cart

• Dantrolene• Sterile water (in warming

cupboard?)• Bicarb, dextrose, CaCl2, lidocaine• Insulin (in fridge)• NS IV bags (in fridge)• Other stuff

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PAR care for MH susceptible

• Observe for 4 – 6 hours • May be appropriate for day surgery

if GA was uneventful

Page 34: Malignant Hyperthermia Barbara Robertson, MD, FRCPC Dept of Anesthesia, PAH.

Thank you!Thank you!