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Unexpected sustained intraoperative hypertension may be due to:

a) Thyroid storm

b) Pheochromocytoma

c) Malignant hyperthermia

d) Autonomic hyperreflexia

e) Pre-eclampsia

f) All of the above

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Answer

Answer f. Pheochromocytoma mimics many conditions and may present during manipulation of the bladder (Foley catheter placement) or during an unrelated surgical procedure. Unexplained sustained hypertension should prompt a widening of the diagnosis and aggressive treatment. A study of modern perioperative complications associated with pheochromocytoma noted that in patients who died, only one anti-hypertensive agent (without alpha-blockade) was used, and four of five deaths were associated with pregnancy (hypertension possibly confused for pre-eclampsia) or hysterectomy (Hariskov J Anaesthesiol Clin Pharmacol (2013) 29(1): 41–46).

Notes

This question originally printed in the Pediatric Anesthesiology Review Topics kindle book series, and appears courtesy of Naerthwyn Press, LLC.

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