Failure to awaken after general anaesthesia secondary to paradoxical venous embolus

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Abstract

A patient is presented who failed to regain consciousness after an apparently uneventful nine-hour revision of a total hip replacement. There were no clinically important haemodynamic changes during the operation, and oxygen saturation, capnography and acid base balance were normal throughout. Postop CT of the head showed a large left MCA infarct with midline shift. At autopsy, the patient was found to have a previously unsuspected patent foramen ovale, and a venous embolus in the left internal carotid artery, which probably had originated from the periprostatic venous plexus with a large infarct in the distribution of the left anterior and middle cérébral arteries. The authors conclude that massive paradoxical venous emboli can occur during surgery with minimal haemodynamic changes. © 1991 Canadian Anesthesiologists.

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Liu, S., Holley, H. S., Stulberg, S. D., & Cohen, B. (1991). Failure to awaken after general anaesthesia secondary to paradoxical venous embolus. Canadian Journal of Anaesthesia, 38(3), 335–337. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF03007624

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