Safe duration of postoperative monitoring for malignant hyperthermia patients administered non-triggering anaesthesia: An update

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Abstract

The postoperative care of malignant hyperthermia (MH) patients is subject to international variation, with a paucity of data in the literature to guide management. Over a series of three studies, our aim was to evaluate whether MH-susceptible patients (and relatives who had not yet been investigated), who had received a non-triggering anaesthetic, could be managed in the same way as the standard surgical population. Following a retrospective study, 206 anaesthetics were administered in a prospective second study to MH-susceptible/related individuals who were monitored for a minimum of one hour in the post anaesthesia care unit and a further 90 minutes in a step-down facility. No problems relating to MH were encountered. The postoperative monitoring time was subsequently changed and, in a third study, patients were managed no differently from standard surgical patients. One hundred and twenty-five anaesthetics were administered with no evidence of problems. This data shows that standard postoperative monitoring times are safe and appropriate in MH-susceptible patients.

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Barnes, C., Stowell, K. M., Bulger, T., Langton, E., & Pollock, N. (2015). Safe duration of postoperative monitoring for malignant hyperthermia patients administered non-triggering anaesthesia: An update. Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, 43(1), 98–104. https://doi.org/10.1177/0310057x1504300115

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