sábado, 16 de septiembre de 2017

Anesthetic management of a child with phosphomannomutase-2 congenital disorder of glycosylation (PMM2-CDG) | JA Clinical Reports | Full Text

Anesthetic management of a child with phosphomannomutase-2 congenital disorder of glycosylation (PMM2-CDG) | JA Clinical Reports | Full Text



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Anesthetic management of a child with phosphomannomutase-2 congenital disorder of glycosylation (PMM2-CDG)

  • Wataru SakaiEmail author,
  • Yusuke Yoshikawa,
  • Yasuyuki Tokinaga and
  • Michiaki Yamakage
JA Clinical Reports20173:8
Received: 10 January 2017
Accepted: 2 February 2017
Published: 10 February 2017

Abstract

Background

Glycosylation is one of the major posttranslational modifications of proteins and it is essential for proteins to obtain normal biological functions. Congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDGs) are very rare genetic disorders that lack enzymes needed for glycosylation. Phosphomannomutase-2 (PMM2)-CDG is the most common type of CDG. CDGs can cause a wide variety of clinical symptoms in almost every organ system. Muscular hypotonia is often present in patients with CDGs and is one of the most notable problems for anesthetic management because the susceptibility to nondepolarizing neuromuscular blocking agents (NMBAs) in patients with CDGs is unknown.

Case presentation

The patient was a 17-month-old boy who weighed 6.5 kg and was 71 cm tall. He presented for strabismus surgery. He had muscular hypotonia, mental retardation, hepatic dysfunction, mild cerebellar hypoplasia, and some dysmorphic features including inverted nipples and abnormal subcutaneous fat distribution of the hips. Gene analysis revealed a compound heterozygous mutation in the gene encoding PMM2 and the patient was diagnosed as having PMM2-CDG. General anesthesia was performed with sevoflurane, nitrous oxide, and rocuronium. Neuromuscular monitoring was performed during anesthesia using train-of-four (TOF)-Watch® (MSD, Japan). As postoperative analgesia, the surgeon performed sub-Tenon’s anesthesia. We did not use any intravenous analgesic. After completion of the operation, residual rocuronium was competed by administration of sugammadex. The patient gained consciousness and spontaneous breathing was established shortly thereafter, and the trachea was smoothly extubated. He was transported to an inpatient ward and was discharged to his home the next day without any complication.

Conclusions

We performed safe anesthetic management in a 17-month-old boy with PMM2-CDG using rocuronium under neuromuscular monitoring.
A patient with PMM2-CDG may show nearly normal susceptibility to nondepolarizing NMBAs.

Keywords

Glycosylation Neuromuscular blocking agents Muscle hypotonia

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