Su Yi-Kai, Wang Jen-Hung, Hsieh Shiu-Ying, Liu Xiu-Zhu, Lam Chen-Fuh, Huang Shian-Che
Department of Anesthesiology, Buddhist Tzu Chi General Hospital and Tzu Chi University School of Medicine, Hualien, Taiwan.
Department of Medical Research, Tzu Chi General Hospital, Hualien, Taiwan.
PLoS One. 2018 Jan 12;13(1):e0190589. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0190589. eCollection 2018.
Lingual nerve injury or neuropraxia is a rare but potentially serious perioperative complication following airway instrumentation during general anesthesia. This study explored the the incidence and perioperative risk factors for lingual nerve injury in patients receiving laryngeal mask (LMA) or endotracheal (ETGA) general anesthesia in a single center experience.
All surgical patients in our hospital who received LMA or ETGA from 2009 to 2013 were included, and potential perioperative risk factors were compared. Matched controls were randomly selected (in 1:5 ratio) from the same database in non-case patients. A total of 36 patients in the records had reported experiencing tongue numbness after anesthesia in this study. Compared with the non-case surgical population (n = 54314), patients with tongue numbness were significantly younger (52.2±19.5 vs 42.0±14.5; P = 0.002) and reported lower ASA physical statuses (2.3±0.7 vs 1.6±0.6; P<0.001). Patient gender, anesthesia technique used, and airway device type (LMA or ETGA) did not differ significantly across the two groups. A significantly higher proportion of patients underwent operations of the head-and-neck region (38.9 vs 15.6%; P = 0.002) developed tongue numbness after anesthesia. Multivariate logistic regression analysis indicated that head-and-neck operations remained the most significant independent risk factor for postoperative lingual nerve injury (AOR 7.63; 95% CI 2.03-28.70).
The overall incidence rate of postoperative lingual neuropraxy was 0.066% in patients receiving general anesthesia with airway device in place. Young and generally healthy patients receiving head-and-neck operation are at higher risk in developing postoperative lingual neuropraxy. Attention should be particularly exercised to reduce the pressure of endotracheal tube or laryngeal mask on the tongue during head-and-neck operation to avert the occurrence of postoperative lingual neuropraxy.
舌神经损伤或神经失用是全身麻醉期间气道器械操作后一种罕见但可能严重的围手术期并发症。本研究在单中心经验中探讨了接受喉罩(LMA)或气管内(ETGA)全身麻醉患者舌神经损伤的发生率及围手术期危险因素。
纳入我院2009年至2013年接受LMA或ETGA的所有手术患者,并比较潜在的围手术期危险因素。从同一数据库中未发生该情况的患者中随机选取匹配对照(比例为1:5)。本研究记录中共有36例患者报告麻醉后出现舌麻木。与未发生该情况的手术人群(n = 54314)相比,出现舌麻木的患者明显更年轻(52.2±19.5岁对42.0±14.5岁;P = 0.002),且美国麻醉医师协会(ASA)身体状况评分更低(2.3±0.7对1.6±0.6;P<0.001)。两组患者的性别、所用麻醉技术及气道装置类型(LMA或ETGA)无显著差异。接受头颈部手术的患者麻醉后出现舌麻木的比例显著更高(38.9%对15.6%;P = 0.002)。多因素逻辑回归分析表明,头颈部手术仍是术后舌神经损伤最显著的独立危险因素(比值比7.63;95%置信区间2.03 - 28.70)。
使用气道装置进行全身麻醉的患者术后舌神经失用的总体发生率为0.066%。接受头颈部手术的年轻且一般健康的患者发生术后舌神经失用的风险更高。在头颈部手术期间应特别注意减轻气管导管或喉罩对舌头的压力,以避免术后舌神经失用的发生。