Anesthetic management of a surgical patient with an acute aortic dissection complicated by hemoglobin Kansas

Abstract Background Hemoglobin Kansas (Hb Kansas) is a rare disease with cyanosis. We report a case of anesthetic management for a patient with an acute aortic dissection complicated by Hb Kansas. Case presentation We encountered a 62-year-old male, surgical patient with an acute aortic dissection c...

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Main Authors: Takashi Kobayashi, Kenji Suzuki
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2019-10-01
Series:JA Clinical Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40981-019-0293-3
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spelling doaj-a170f6b7384d43818e7c1f37a236c8e42021-04-02T18:04:30ZengSpringerOpenJA Clinical Reports2363-90242019-10-01511310.1186/s40981-019-0293-3Anesthetic management of a surgical patient with an acute aortic dissection complicated by hemoglobin KansasTakashi Kobayashi0Kenji Suzuki1Department of Anesthesiology, School of Medicine, Iwate Medical UniversityDepartment of Anesthesiology, School of Medicine, Iwate Medical UniversityAbstract Background Hemoglobin Kansas (Hb Kansas) is a rare disease with cyanosis. We report a case of anesthetic management for a patient with an acute aortic dissection complicated by Hb Kansas. Case presentation We encountered a 62-year-old male, surgical patient with an acute aortic dissection complicated by postoperative Hb Kansas. During anesthesia, his arterial oxygen saturation was low, while the partial pressure of arterial oxygen was within the normal range. The patient underwent ascending aortic replacement under hypothermic circulation arrest with a bladder temperature of 22 °C after introducing cardiopulmonary bypass. The patient was then referred to the hematology department for detailed examination and was diagnosed as having Hb Kansas through genetic analysis at 2 months after surgery. Conclusions Except for apparent cyanosis, Hb Kansas causes no clinical problems because the delivery of oxygen to peripheral tissues may be enhanced for such patients. When we perform anesthetic management for cyanosis patients with unknown causes, it is necessary to consider the oxygen supply-demand balance.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40981-019-0293-3Hemoglobin KansasAcute aortic dissectionAortic replacement
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Takashi Kobayashi
Kenji Suzuki
spellingShingle Takashi Kobayashi
Kenji Suzuki
Anesthetic management of a surgical patient with an acute aortic dissection complicated by hemoglobin Kansas
JA Clinical Reports
Hemoglobin Kansas
Acute aortic dissection
Aortic replacement
author_facet Takashi Kobayashi
Kenji Suzuki
author_sort Takashi Kobayashi
title Anesthetic management of a surgical patient with an acute aortic dissection complicated by hemoglobin Kansas
title_short Anesthetic management of a surgical patient with an acute aortic dissection complicated by hemoglobin Kansas
title_full Anesthetic management of a surgical patient with an acute aortic dissection complicated by hemoglobin Kansas
title_fullStr Anesthetic management of a surgical patient with an acute aortic dissection complicated by hemoglobin Kansas
title_full_unstemmed Anesthetic management of a surgical patient with an acute aortic dissection complicated by hemoglobin Kansas
title_sort anesthetic management of a surgical patient with an acute aortic dissection complicated by hemoglobin kansas
publisher SpringerOpen
series JA Clinical Reports
issn 2363-9024
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Abstract Background Hemoglobin Kansas (Hb Kansas) is a rare disease with cyanosis. We report a case of anesthetic management for a patient with an acute aortic dissection complicated by Hb Kansas. Case presentation We encountered a 62-year-old male, surgical patient with an acute aortic dissection complicated by postoperative Hb Kansas. During anesthesia, his arterial oxygen saturation was low, while the partial pressure of arterial oxygen was within the normal range. The patient underwent ascending aortic replacement under hypothermic circulation arrest with a bladder temperature of 22 °C after introducing cardiopulmonary bypass. The patient was then referred to the hematology department for detailed examination and was diagnosed as having Hb Kansas through genetic analysis at 2 months after surgery. Conclusions Except for apparent cyanosis, Hb Kansas causes no clinical problems because the delivery of oxygen to peripheral tissues may be enhanced for such patients. When we perform anesthetic management for cyanosis patients with unknown causes, it is necessary to consider the oxygen supply-demand balance.
topic Hemoglobin Kansas
Acute aortic dissection
Aortic replacement
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40981-019-0293-3
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