Management under anesthesia of a patient with renal cell carcinoma extending into the retrohepatic inferior vena cava with the aid of partial cardiopulmonary bypass] |
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Authors: | H Shimono Y Kadota H Uchiyama Y Miyamoto K Kawasaki N Yoshimura |
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Affiliation: | Department of Anesthesiology & Critical Care Medicine, Kagoshima University School of Medicine. |
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Abstract: | A 70-year-old male with renal cell carcinoma extending into the retrohepatic inferior vena cava was scheduled for radical nephrectomy with vena caval resection under general anesthesia. He had received partial gastrectomy for gastric cancer twelve years before. Computed tomography and inferior vena cavography confirmed that the vena cava was almost completely occluded and that a collateral venous network was well established. It was considered that the surgical approach to the retrohepatic cavals area was technically very difficult, and that there was a high possibility of a pulmonary embolus during the surgical manipulation. To prevent a pulmonary embolus and get good control of the vena cava above the tumor and below the hepatic vein, we decided to use a partial cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) until the vena cava was clamping above the tumor. Anesthesia was induced with propofol and fentanyl, and maintained with fentanyl and isoflurane-N2O-O2. In the partial CPB blood from the hepatic vein was drained from the inferior vena cava cannula through right atrium, oxygenated by microporus membrane oxygenator, and returned to the left femoral artery. Cannulation to drain the venous circulation entering the vena cava below the tumor was abandoned because the extensive collateral venous network ultimately drains into the superior vena cava. The partial CPB time was 90 min, and the bladder temperature during the CPB was 35-36 degrees C. During the 7.3 hr procedure, the pulmonary embolus did not occur and the total blood loss was 5515 ml. The patient made an uncomplicated recovery and was discharged 30 days after the operation. This newly reported partial-CPB method may be safe and effective for the management under anesthesia of other patients. |
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