Suppr超能文献

跨性别男性的血氧饱和度降低:关于束胸实践的初步关注和建议:病例报告。

Oxygen desaturation in a transgender man: initial concerns and recommendations regarding the practice of chest binding: a case report.

机构信息

Department of Anesthesiology, Boston Medical Center, 750 Albany Street, Power Plant 2R, Boston, MA, 02118, USA.

Boston University School of Medicine, 72 E Concord St, Boston, MA, 02118, USA.

出版信息

J Med Case Rep. 2022 Sep 4;16(1):333. doi: 10.1186/s13256-022-03527-z.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Over 1.4 million US adults identify as transgender when gender identity differs from the sex assigned at birth [1]. Although transgender patients face adverse health outcomes, they remain an understudied population [2]. A 2017 study surveyed 411 practicing clinicians and found that 80% had been involved in treating a transgender patient, but 80.6% had never received training on transgender care [3]. The purpose of this report is to describe prolonged desaturation in one case of a transgender patient who wore a chest binder intraoperatively owing to a lack of preoperative recognition.

CASE PRESENTATION

A 19-year-old transgender male of African-American descent with anxiety and class 3 obesity presented for an esophagogastroduodenoscopy to evaluate a 2-year history of upper abdominal pain unresponsive to proton pump inhibitor therapy, with a plan for monitored anesthesia care. His medications included sertraline, pantoprazole, zolpidem, ergocalciferol, leuprolide, and testosterone cypionate. Preoperatively, the patient was instructed to remove all clothing and to don a patient gown while in the bathroom. The attending anesthesiologist then conducted the interview and examination in the preoperative holding area. The patient was induced with 250 mg of propofol, and reassuring respirations were noted by capnography. Respirations and oxygen saturation remained stable upon insertion of the endoscope. Four minutes later, the patient's oxygen saturation rapidly decreased to 50% and end-tidal capnography was lost. The endoscope was removed, and the patient was given 200 mg of propofol and 20 mg succinylcholine. His oxygen saturation recovered to 80% and 100% after 2 and 5 minutes, respectively, of ventilation with 100% inspired oxygen. No further oxygen desaturation was noted throughout the procedure, and the patient was closely monitored for signs of respiratory difficulty during an uneventful postoperative course. After full emergence, it was revealed that the patient had been wearing a chest binder throughout the operative procedure. The patient was counseled on the necessity to communicate the presence of this accessory prior to all future procedures.

CONCLUSION

In the clinical narrative, a healthy patient was observed to have prolonged oxygen desaturation after induction of anesthesia. Laryngospasm was suspected clinically owing to the sudden absence of end-tidal carbon dioxide. Prolonged oxygen desaturation despite appropriate interventions suggests the contribution of additional factors. We speculate that the presence of a chest binder intraoperatively predisposed the patient to more rapid oxygen desaturation less responsive to typical therapy. A chest binder would introduce mechanical restriction to the patient's breathing owing to its inherent design to compress. Although the patient was asked to remove all clothing, specific instructions were not provided regarding the removal of a chest binder. The presence of chest binding was also absent in the electronic health record, despite the documented presence of the patient's preferred gender, hormonal therapy regimen, and medical history. Ultimately, this case reflects the gap between practitioner knowledge and hospital guidelines and the practices of transgender patients. In reviewing existing literature and the potential for atelectasis with external compression, we would consider that patients refrain from chest binding for 12-24 hours before surgical procedures, resume no sooner than 24 hours after ambulation, and participate in diagnostic incentive spirometry pre- and postoperatively.

摘要

背景

在美国,超过 140 万成年人的性别认同与出生时分配的性别不同,自称为跨性别者[1]。尽管跨性别者面临不良健康后果,但他们仍然是一个研究不足的群体[2]。2017 年的一项研究调查了 411 名执业临床医生,发现 80%的人曾参与治疗过跨性别患者,但从未接受过跨性别护理方面的培训[3]。本报告的目的是描述一名跨性别患者在手术中因缺乏术前认识而佩戴胸部束带导致长时间脱氧的情况。

病例介绍

一名 19 岁的非裔美国跨性别男性,患有焦虑症和 3 级肥胖症,因上腹疼痛 2 年,质子泵抑制剂治疗无效,拟行食管胃十二指肠镜检查,计划行监测麻醉。他的药物包括舍曲林、泮托拉唑、唑吡坦、骨化三醇、亮丙瑞林和睾酮 Cypionate。术前,患者被指示脱下所有衣服,并在浴室里穿上病人长袍。主治麻醉师随后在术前等候区进行了访谈和检查。患者接受了 250mg 丙泊酚诱导,呼气末二氧化碳监测显示呼吸平稳。插入内镜后,呼吸和氧饱和度保持稳定。4 分钟后,患者的氧饱和度迅速下降至 50%,呼气末二氧化碳监测消失。内镜被取出,患者给予 200mg 丙泊酚和 20mg 琥珀胆碱。他的氧饱和度分别在 2 分钟和 5 分钟后恢复到 80%和 100%,在 100%吸入氧气通气下。整个手术过程中没有发现进一步的氧饱和度下降,患者在术后过程中没有出现呼吸困难的迹象,得到了密切监测。完全苏醒后,发现患者在整个手术过程中一直穿着胸部束带。患者被告知在所有未来的手术前都要告知存在这种附件。

结论

在临床叙述中,观察到一名健康患者在麻醉诱导后出现长时间的氧饱和度下降。由于突然没有呼气末二氧化碳,临床上怀疑是喉痉挛。尽管进行了适当的干预,但长时间的氧饱和度下降表明存在其他因素。我们推测,术中使用胸部束带使患者更容易出现氧饱和度下降,且对典型治疗的反应更差。胸部束带会因其固有的压缩设计而对患者的呼吸造成机械限制。尽管患者被要求脱下所有衣服,但没有提供关于脱下胸部束带的具体说明。电子病历中也没有胸部束带的记录,尽管记录了患者首选的性别、激素治疗方案和病史。最终,这个病例反映了从业者知识与医院指南之间的差距,以及跨性别患者的实际情况。在回顾现有文献和外部压迫导致肺不张的可能性时,我们会考虑让患者在手术前 12-24 小时内避免穿胸部束带,在术后 24 小时后步行恢复后才能穿,并且在术前和术后进行诊断性激励式肺活量测定。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/3297/9441088/ba822a424967/13256_2022_3527_Fig1_HTML.jpg

文献检索

告别复杂PubMed语法,用中文像聊天一样搜索,搜遍4000万医学文献。AI智能推荐,让科研检索更轻松。

立即免费搜索

文件翻译

保留排版,准确专业,支持PDF/Word/PPT等文件格式,支持 12+语言互译。

免费翻译文档

深度研究

AI帮你快速写综述,25分钟生成高质量综述,智能提取关键信息,辅助科研写作。

立即免费体验