Oral Surgery Resident, Complex Unit of Odontostomatology, Department of Interdisciplinary Medicine, University of Bari Aldo Moro, Italy.
Assistant at the chair of Anesthesiology, Unit of Anesthesiology, Department of Emergency, University of Bari Aldo Moro, Italy.
J Oral Maxillofac Surg. 2021 Nov;79(11):2269.e1-2269.e11. doi: 10.1016/j.joms.2021.07.012. Epub 2021 Jul 16.
Brugada syndrome (BrS) carries the risk of major dysrhythmias increased further by exposure to pro-dysrhythmic factors related to oral surgical procedures such as local anesthetics, anxiety, and postoperative pain. Such risk can be handled by updated multidisciplinary management. In 2020, 3 male BrS patients needed oral surgical treatments at the Complex Unit of Odontostomatology of Aldo Moro University of Bari, Italy. Multidisciplinary individual risk assessment involved cardiologic hazard ratio stratification, event-free survival stratification, and 5-year average risk of ventricular dysrhythmias and sudden cardiac death for Brugada patients; American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status risk class; expected complexity and duration of the procedure; and anxiety score measured by the Modified Dental Anxiety Scale. The authors administered conscious sedation by intravenous diazepam to both a patient susceptible to vasovagal syncope needing tooth extraction with concomitant cystectomy (longer-lasting procedure) and to another who needed routine tooth extraction (brief procedure) but had a moderate dental anxiety score; the last 1 received local anesthesia alone due to his low anxiety, low susceptibility to vasovagal syncope, and need for routine tooth extraction. After positioning external biphasic defibrillator pads, 12-leads continuous electrocardiogram, and peripheral venous access, extractions were performed with local anesthesia by lidocaine 2% with epinephrine 1:100,000; acetaminophen was suggested for postoperative analgesia. No electrocardiographic changes occurred in the perioperative period. The current multidisciplinary individual risk assessment allowed us to detect each BrS patient's risk factors for major dysrhythmias and to adapt oral surgical and anesthesiologic protocols for safe targeted treatment.
布鲁加达综合征(BrS)使患者发生严重心律失常的风险增加,而与口腔手术相关的致心律失常因素(如局部麻醉剂、焦虑和术后疼痛)会进一步增加这种风险。这种风险可以通过更新的多学科管理来处理。2020 年,意大利巴里阿尔多·莫罗大学综合口腔颌面外科单元为 3 名男性 BrS 患者提供了口腔手术治疗。多学科个体化风险评估包括心脏危险比分层、无事件生存分层以及 Brugada 患者 5 年平均室性心律失常和心源性猝死风险、美国麻醉医师协会身体状况风险分级、预期手术的复杂性和持续时间以及通过改良牙科焦虑量表测量的焦虑评分。作者对一名易发生血管迷走性晕厥的患者(需拔牙并同时进行囊肿切除术,手术时间较长)和另一名仅需常规拔牙(手术时间较短)但有中度牙科焦虑评分的患者静脉注射地西泮进行了清醒镇静;最后一名患者由于焦虑程度低、易发生血管迷走性晕厥和需要常规拔牙,仅接受局部麻醉。在放置外部双相除颤器电极片、12 导联连续心电图和外周静脉通路后,使用 2%利多卡因加 1:100,000 肾上腺素进行局部麻醉拔牙;建议术后使用对乙酰氨基酚进行镇痛。围手术期未发生心电图变化。目前的多学科个体化风险评估使我们能够发现每位 BrS 患者发生严重心律失常的危险因素,并调整口腔手术和麻醉学方案以进行安全的靶向治疗。