TY - JOUR
T1 - Anesthésie pour traitement des tumeurs endocrines
AU - Billard, V.
AU - Cheikh, M.
AU - Delaporte-Cerceau, S.
AU - Raffin-Sanson, M. L.
PY - 2009/6/1
Y1 - 2009/6/1
N2 - Endocrine tumors could be defined by their ability to produce structural proteins or hormones commons to nervous and endocrine cells. They might induce physiological transforms or outcome adverse events which should be well known in order to prevent or treat them early. The goal of this review was to describe these changes, to describe preoperative assessment, and to discuss intraoperative monitoring and drugs choice based on the literature from the last 30 years. As an example, it should be noticed that: (1) preoperative blood pressure control is essential to prepare phaeochromocytoma for surgery. It should be followed during anaesthesia by intensive fluid load, reversible anaesthetic drugs and rational cardiovascular medications use (as for example remifentanil, sevoflurane, calcium channel blockers and esmolol), and after surgery by narrow clinical and biological monitoring; (2) after medullar thyroid cancer, main adverse events include cervical compressive haematoma and recurrent laryngeal nerve injury as for any thyroid surgery; (3) during pituitary surgery, air embolism might be expected, whereas water dysregulation (diabetes insipidus), corticotroph insuficiency, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leak might occur postoperatively. In acromegaly, difficult endotracheal intubation is possible whereas severe Cushing's syndrome may be complicated with hypertensive cardiac failure, infections, thrombosis, delayed cicatrisation; (4) somatostatine analogs are a keystone in carcinoid tumors preoperative and anaesthetic management.
AB - Endocrine tumors could be defined by their ability to produce structural proteins or hormones commons to nervous and endocrine cells. They might induce physiological transforms or outcome adverse events which should be well known in order to prevent or treat them early. The goal of this review was to describe these changes, to describe preoperative assessment, and to discuss intraoperative monitoring and drugs choice based on the literature from the last 30 years. As an example, it should be noticed that: (1) preoperative blood pressure control is essential to prepare phaeochromocytoma for surgery. It should be followed during anaesthesia by intensive fluid load, reversible anaesthetic drugs and rational cardiovascular medications use (as for example remifentanil, sevoflurane, calcium channel blockers and esmolol), and after surgery by narrow clinical and biological monitoring; (2) after medullar thyroid cancer, main adverse events include cervical compressive haematoma and recurrent laryngeal nerve injury as for any thyroid surgery; (3) during pituitary surgery, air embolism might be expected, whereas water dysregulation (diabetes insipidus), corticotroph insuficiency, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leak might occur postoperatively. In acromegaly, difficult endotracheal intubation is possible whereas severe Cushing's syndrome may be complicated with hypertensive cardiac failure, infections, thrombosis, delayed cicatrisation; (4) somatostatine analogs are a keystone in carcinoid tumors preoperative and anaesthetic management.
KW - Adverse events
KW - Anaesthesia
KW - Betablockers
KW - Calcium inhibitors
KW - Endocrine tumors
KW - Hormone
KW - Monitoring
KW - Opotherapy
KW - Somatostatine
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=67649338435&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.annfar.2009.04.004
DO - 10.1016/j.annfar.2009.04.004
M3 - Brève enquête
C2 - 19467826
AN - SCOPUS:67649338435
SN - 0750-7658
VL - 28
SP - 549
EP - 563
JO - Annales Francaises d'Anesthesie et de Reanimation
JF - Annales Francaises d'Anesthesie et de Reanimation
IS - 6
ER -