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Anaesthesia for Myasthenia
Gravis
presenter: Dr. Kundan Kishor Ghimire
Moderator: Dr. Priska Bastola
Myasthenia Gravis(MG)
• an autoimmune disorder
• characterized by fatigable weakness of skeletal muscles.
• an antibody-mediated immunological attack directed at
acetylcholine receptors (or receptor-associated proteins).
• in post synaptic membrane of neuromuscular junction.
•Clinical Presentation
• fluctuating muscle weakness that worsens with exertion and
improves after a period of rest.
• occular muscle weakness(85%)
• ptosis- u/l, b/l, symmetric/asymmetric
• diplopia- intermittent
• weakness of face and throat muscles
• dysphagia
• dysarthria
• dysphonia
• myasthenia snarls
• limb muscle weakness (15%-20%)
• neck extensors> flexors
• upper limbs> lower limbs
• Respiratory muscle weakness
• dyspnea particularly in supine position
• weakness of the intercostal muscles and the diaphragm
• collapse the upper airway
• neurmuscular emergency- mechanical ventilation
• Epidemiology
• rare, incidence of approx 1 in 30,000 people
• women:men= 1.5:1
• Incidence: bimodal, varies with sex
• women: 2nd-3rd decade
• men:5th-6th decade
• higher incidence of autoimmune disease: autoimmune
thyroid disease, RA, SLE, DM.
Classification in Children
• Diagnosis
• History and clinical examination
• diagnostic tests
• Electrophysiologic tests:
• Repetative nerve stimulation test (RNS)
• single fibre electromyography(SFEMG)
• Pharmacologic tests: Edrophonium( Tensilon test)
• Serologic tests- Anti- AChR radioimmunoassay
• Anti-MuSK Abs
Myasthenia gravis treatments
•symptomatic treatment- anticholinesterase agents,
•chronic immunomodulating treatments-
glucocorticoids and other immunosuppressive
medication, and
•rapid immunomodulating treatments-
• plasmapheresis and intravenous immunoglobulin)
•Surgical Treatment
Anticholinsterase agents
Pyridostigmine,
•onset -15 to 30 mins,
•peak action:1-2 hours, duration: 3-4 hours.
•timing and dose is based on the patient’s symptoms.
•Dose: 30-120mg PO, then titrated to effect.
•IV dose in perioperative period, approx 1/30th oral dose
corticosteroids
•reduce AChR antibodies.
•Prednisolone: 15-20mg/day gradually increased to
60mg/day and alt day later
•onset of effect: 2-3wks
•maximal effect: 3-6 months
Immunotherapy —
• conjunction with corticosteroids and anticholinesterases.
• Azathioprine, cyclophosphamide, cyclosporine,
methotrexate, mycophenlate mofetil, and tacrolimus.
• Azathioprine
• 2-3mg/kg/day(total dose 100-250mg/day)
• onset of effect:3-12 months, maximal effects: 1-2 yrs
Plasmapheresis:
• removes Abs from circulation and produces short-term clinical
improvement.
• 3-4l/exchange
• 5 exchanges over 10-14 days period
• before thymectomy , during myasthenia crisis and periodically to
maintain remission.
Intravenous immunoglobulin
• rapid improvement for several weeks
• dose: 400mg/kg/day alternately for 5 days.
• MOA is unknown, no consistent effect on the measurable
amount of ACh receptor Abs.
Thymectomy
• thymoma and early-onset generalized MG in pt between
puberty and <60yrs.
• goal: induce remission, immunosuppressive medication
reduction.
• 50%-80% clinical improvement, and 21 %-38%: clinical
remission
• approach
• transsternal: better surgical exposure, 50% postoperative ventilation
• transcervical; minimally invasive, 10% postoperative ventilation
• other approaches : minimally invasive and combined transcervical- transternal
Preoperative Evaluation
• Elective surgery:
• stable phase
• minimal immunomodulatory medication or
glucocorticoids.
• routine preoperative evaluation.
• bulbar and respiratory symptoms,
• history of exacerbations or myasthenic crisis.
• surgery as early in the day as possible, when patient is strongest.
History:
• Bulbar symptoms (eg, dysphagia, dysarthria, nasal speech, or
low-intensity speech).
• History of myasthenic crisis and intubation.
• Respiratory muscle weakness, SOB.
• MG therapy.
• Associated diseases.(thyroid diseases, Anaemia, leukemia,
lymphoma)
• autoimmune diseases (eg, thyroiditis, RA, SLE)
Investigation:
• CBC
• RFT and serum electrolytes
• LFT
• Blood sugar level
• ABGs and PFT-
• CECT chest- for thymic mass
• Prediction of Postoperative myasthenia crisis:
• Risk factors —
• Vital capacity <2 to 2.9 L
• Duration of MG (>6 years)
• Pyridostigmine dosage >750 mg/day
• History of COPD.
• History of myasthenic crisis
• Intraoperative blood loss >1000 mL
• Serum antiacetylcholine receptor antibody >100 nmol/mL
• More pronounced decremental response (18-20 %) on low frequency repetitive
nerve stimulation
Anaesthetic management
• Avoid NMBAs whenever possible.
• Use ultrashort- or short-acting sedatives, hypnotics, and
anesthetic agents.
Premedication
• Metoclopromide, H2 blocker
• avoid premedication with sedatives.
• If necessary, smallest effective dose administered incrementally
(eg, midazolam 0.5 mg IV),
• continuous monitoring for bulbar weakness and respiratory
compromise.
Monitoring
• Basic monitoring: ECG, NIBP, SPO2, ETCO2, Temp
• ABGs
• Peripheral Nerve Stimulator
• Choice of anesthetic technique —
• local or regional anesthesia if possible.
• Regional anesthesia for peripheral procedures
• relatively low-level neuraxial anesthesia, either epidural or
spinal, or with peripheral nerve blocks.
• use amide local anesthetics over esters.
• Neuraxial anesthesia –
• Mid-thoracic or higher levels can result in accessory
muscle paralysis.
• Patients with preoperative respiratory compromise or
bulbar weakness may not tolerate.
• Brachial plexus blocks –
• Supraclavicular and interscalene brachial plexus blocks can
paralyze the diaphragm,
• for many hours, patients with respiratory compromise may
not tolerate.
• Induction and maintenance of anesthesia —
• Goals:
• prevent prolonged effects on respiratory and bulbar muscles,
and
• allow rapid recovery at the end of surgery.
• avoid NMBAs when possible.
• Inhalational agents –
• potent inhaled anesthetics(isoflurane, sevoflurane, desflurane)
• dose-dependent neuromuscular relaxation.
• adequate relaxation for endotracheal intubation and surgery.
• possibly equivalent to the level of relaxation achieved with
NMBAs in normal patients.
• Muscle strength recovers without reversal agents.
• Intravenous agents –
• IV anesthetics with or without small doses of NMBAs.
• Propofol, most commonly used for induction.
• TIVA with propofol infusion and remifentanil without NMBAs for
thymectomy.
• Remifentanil,
• an ultrashort-acting opioid, for intubation avoiding NMBAs.
• For a high-dose remifentanil intubation,
• propofol (2 mg/kg) plus remifentanil (4-5 mcg/kg)
• good to excellent intubating conditions at 2.5 minutes
after induction.
• Other IV agents
• to reduce the reflexes in response to laryngoscopy and
intubation while avoiding the administration of NMBAs.
• IV lidocaine (1 to 1.5 mg/kg IV),
• small doses of short-acting opioids (eg, fentanyl 50 to 100
mcg), and esmolol (10 to 50 mg) .
• Neuromuscular blocking agents (NMBAs) —
• avoid NMBAs unless absolutely necessary.
• rocuronium or vecuronium, and reverse with sugammadex.
• variable response to reversal, possibility of cholinergic crisis.
• anticholinesterase medication affects the degree of relaxation
and duration of NMBAs action.
• Monitor neuromuscular blockade using a quantitative TOF nerve
stimulator.
• For most surgical procedures,
1. Adequate relaxation by potent inhalational agents and,
2. depth of anesthesia achieved with IV agents.
• Depolarizing NMBAs(Succinylcholine) —
• variable response
• resistant: no anticholinesterase
• ED95 is 2.6 times normals (0.8 versus 0.3 mg/kg).
• prolonged effect:
• with anticholinesterase treatment
• as more SCh reaches motor endplate.
• Nondepolarizing NMBAs —
• extremely sensitive.
• available receptors are sufficient to produce endplate potential
above threshold
• for NM transmission and muscle contraction.
• Very small doses can result respiratory distress after emergence.
• 10% of usual dose.
• Guided by quantitative train-of-four nerve stimulator.
• steroidal NMBA to allow reversal with sugammadex.
• Mivacurium: prolonged paralysis in patients who have taken
pyridostigmine on the morning of surgery.
• Reversal of NMBAs —
• sugammadex rather than neostigmine.
• reversal if train-of-four ratio of >0.9 using a quantitative train-of-
four peripheral nerve stimulator.
• Sugammadex: 2-4mg/kg iv
• Neostigmine: if used titrated to effect to avoid cholinergic crisis.
• Extubation —
• short-acting anesthetics and multimodal analgesia.
• avoid medications that interfere with neuromuscular
transmission.
• adequate ventilation and oxygenation, strength, and the ability
to protect the airway.
Myasthenic crisis —
• severe respiratory muscle and/or bulbar muscle weakness
that necessitate intubation or to delay extubation.
• In awake patients, signs of impending crisis: dysphagia,
change in phonation, obstruction, weak cough, and difficulty
handling secretions.
• first sign: increase in RR with shallower tidal volume breaths.
• Use of accessory muscles or paradoxical movement of the
abdomen.
• Blood gases:
• hypocapnia in spontaneously breathing patients.
• increase (pCO2) is a sign of impending respiratory failure
• Treatment:
• delay extubation, as well as intensive care.
• plasma exchange or IV immune globulin, in addition to
immunomodulating therapy.
Cholinergic crisis —
• Patients receiving anticholinesterases are at risk.
• manifested by paradoxical weakness along with other signs
of cholinergic excess,
• after administration of an anticholinesterase for reversal.
• If suspected, atropine (0.4 to 2 mg IV) or glycopyrrolate (0.2
to 1 mg IV).
• References
• Morgan and Mikhail’s clinical anaesthesiology 6th edition
• Miller’s Anaesthesia 8th edition
• Barash’s clinical Anaesthesia, 8th edition
• Uptodate 2019

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Myasthenia gravis CTVA presentation

  • 1. Anaesthesia for Myasthenia Gravis presenter: Dr. Kundan Kishor Ghimire Moderator: Dr. Priska Bastola
  • 2. Myasthenia Gravis(MG) • an autoimmune disorder • characterized by fatigable weakness of skeletal muscles. • an antibody-mediated immunological attack directed at acetylcholine receptors (or receptor-associated proteins). • in post synaptic membrane of neuromuscular junction.
  • 3.
  • 4. •Clinical Presentation • fluctuating muscle weakness that worsens with exertion and improves after a period of rest. • occular muscle weakness(85%) • ptosis- u/l, b/l, symmetric/asymmetric • diplopia- intermittent
  • 5. • weakness of face and throat muscles • dysphagia • dysarthria • dysphonia • myasthenia snarls • limb muscle weakness (15%-20%) • neck extensors> flexors • upper limbs> lower limbs
  • 6. • Respiratory muscle weakness • dyspnea particularly in supine position • weakness of the intercostal muscles and the diaphragm • collapse the upper airway • neurmuscular emergency- mechanical ventilation
  • 7. • Epidemiology • rare, incidence of approx 1 in 30,000 people • women:men= 1.5:1 • Incidence: bimodal, varies with sex • women: 2nd-3rd decade • men:5th-6th decade • higher incidence of autoimmune disease: autoimmune thyroid disease, RA, SLE, DM.
  • 8.
  • 9.
  • 11. • Diagnosis • History and clinical examination • diagnostic tests • Electrophysiologic tests: • Repetative nerve stimulation test (RNS) • single fibre electromyography(SFEMG) • Pharmacologic tests: Edrophonium( Tensilon test) • Serologic tests- Anti- AChR radioimmunoassay • Anti-MuSK Abs
  • 12.
  • 13. Myasthenia gravis treatments •symptomatic treatment- anticholinesterase agents, •chronic immunomodulating treatments- glucocorticoids and other immunosuppressive medication, and •rapid immunomodulating treatments- • plasmapheresis and intravenous immunoglobulin) •Surgical Treatment
  • 14. Anticholinsterase agents Pyridostigmine, •onset -15 to 30 mins, •peak action:1-2 hours, duration: 3-4 hours. •timing and dose is based on the patient’s symptoms. •Dose: 30-120mg PO, then titrated to effect. •IV dose in perioperative period, approx 1/30th oral dose
  • 15. corticosteroids •reduce AChR antibodies. •Prednisolone: 15-20mg/day gradually increased to 60mg/day and alt day later •onset of effect: 2-3wks •maximal effect: 3-6 months
  • 16. Immunotherapy — • conjunction with corticosteroids and anticholinesterases. • Azathioprine, cyclophosphamide, cyclosporine, methotrexate, mycophenlate mofetil, and tacrolimus. • Azathioprine • 2-3mg/kg/day(total dose 100-250mg/day) • onset of effect:3-12 months, maximal effects: 1-2 yrs
  • 17. Plasmapheresis: • removes Abs from circulation and produces short-term clinical improvement. • 3-4l/exchange • 5 exchanges over 10-14 days period • before thymectomy , during myasthenia crisis and periodically to maintain remission.
  • 18. Intravenous immunoglobulin • rapid improvement for several weeks • dose: 400mg/kg/day alternately for 5 days. • MOA is unknown, no consistent effect on the measurable amount of ACh receptor Abs.
  • 19. Thymectomy • thymoma and early-onset generalized MG in pt between puberty and <60yrs. • goal: induce remission, immunosuppressive medication reduction. • 50%-80% clinical improvement, and 21 %-38%: clinical remission • approach • transsternal: better surgical exposure, 50% postoperative ventilation • transcervical; minimally invasive, 10% postoperative ventilation • other approaches : minimally invasive and combined transcervical- transternal
  • 20. Preoperative Evaluation • Elective surgery: • stable phase • minimal immunomodulatory medication or glucocorticoids. • routine preoperative evaluation. • bulbar and respiratory symptoms, • history of exacerbations or myasthenic crisis. • surgery as early in the day as possible, when patient is strongest.
  • 21. History: • Bulbar symptoms (eg, dysphagia, dysarthria, nasal speech, or low-intensity speech). • History of myasthenic crisis and intubation. • Respiratory muscle weakness, SOB. • MG therapy. • Associated diseases.(thyroid diseases, Anaemia, leukemia, lymphoma) • autoimmune diseases (eg, thyroiditis, RA, SLE)
  • 22. Investigation: • CBC • RFT and serum electrolytes • LFT • Blood sugar level • ABGs and PFT- • CECT chest- for thymic mass
  • 23. • Prediction of Postoperative myasthenia crisis: • Risk factors — • Vital capacity <2 to 2.9 L • Duration of MG (>6 years) • Pyridostigmine dosage >750 mg/day • History of COPD. • History of myasthenic crisis • Intraoperative blood loss >1000 mL • Serum antiacetylcholine receptor antibody >100 nmol/mL • More pronounced decremental response (18-20 %) on low frequency repetitive nerve stimulation
  • 24. Anaesthetic management • Avoid NMBAs whenever possible. • Use ultrashort- or short-acting sedatives, hypnotics, and anesthetic agents.
  • 25. Premedication • Metoclopromide, H2 blocker • avoid premedication with sedatives. • If necessary, smallest effective dose administered incrementally (eg, midazolam 0.5 mg IV), • continuous monitoring for bulbar weakness and respiratory compromise.
  • 26. Monitoring • Basic monitoring: ECG, NIBP, SPO2, ETCO2, Temp • ABGs • Peripheral Nerve Stimulator
  • 27. • Choice of anesthetic technique — • local or regional anesthesia if possible. • Regional anesthesia for peripheral procedures • relatively low-level neuraxial anesthesia, either epidural or spinal, or with peripheral nerve blocks. • use amide local anesthetics over esters.
  • 28. • Neuraxial anesthesia – • Mid-thoracic or higher levels can result in accessory muscle paralysis. • Patients with preoperative respiratory compromise or bulbar weakness may not tolerate. • Brachial plexus blocks – • Supraclavicular and interscalene brachial plexus blocks can paralyze the diaphragm, • for many hours, patients with respiratory compromise may not tolerate.
  • 29. • Induction and maintenance of anesthesia — • Goals: • prevent prolonged effects on respiratory and bulbar muscles, and • allow rapid recovery at the end of surgery. • avoid NMBAs when possible.
  • 30. • Inhalational agents – • potent inhaled anesthetics(isoflurane, sevoflurane, desflurane) • dose-dependent neuromuscular relaxation. • adequate relaxation for endotracheal intubation and surgery. • possibly equivalent to the level of relaxation achieved with NMBAs in normal patients. • Muscle strength recovers without reversal agents.
  • 31. • Intravenous agents – • IV anesthetics with or without small doses of NMBAs. • Propofol, most commonly used for induction. • TIVA with propofol infusion and remifentanil without NMBAs for thymectomy.
  • 32. • Remifentanil, • an ultrashort-acting opioid, for intubation avoiding NMBAs. • For a high-dose remifentanil intubation, • propofol (2 mg/kg) plus remifentanil (4-5 mcg/kg) • good to excellent intubating conditions at 2.5 minutes after induction.
  • 33. • Other IV agents • to reduce the reflexes in response to laryngoscopy and intubation while avoiding the administration of NMBAs. • IV lidocaine (1 to 1.5 mg/kg IV), • small doses of short-acting opioids (eg, fentanyl 50 to 100 mcg), and esmolol (10 to 50 mg) .
  • 34. • Neuromuscular blocking agents (NMBAs) — • avoid NMBAs unless absolutely necessary. • rocuronium or vecuronium, and reverse with sugammadex. • variable response to reversal, possibility of cholinergic crisis. • anticholinesterase medication affects the degree of relaxation and duration of NMBAs action. • Monitor neuromuscular blockade using a quantitative TOF nerve stimulator.
  • 35. • For most surgical procedures, 1. Adequate relaxation by potent inhalational agents and, 2. depth of anesthesia achieved with IV agents.
  • 36. • Depolarizing NMBAs(Succinylcholine) — • variable response • resistant: no anticholinesterase • ED95 is 2.6 times normals (0.8 versus 0.3 mg/kg). • prolonged effect: • with anticholinesterase treatment • as more SCh reaches motor endplate.
  • 37. • Nondepolarizing NMBAs — • extremely sensitive. • available receptors are sufficient to produce endplate potential above threshold • for NM transmission and muscle contraction. • Very small doses can result respiratory distress after emergence.
  • 38. • 10% of usual dose. • Guided by quantitative train-of-four nerve stimulator. • steroidal NMBA to allow reversal with sugammadex. • Mivacurium: prolonged paralysis in patients who have taken pyridostigmine on the morning of surgery.
  • 39. • Reversal of NMBAs — • sugammadex rather than neostigmine. • reversal if train-of-four ratio of >0.9 using a quantitative train-of- four peripheral nerve stimulator. • Sugammadex: 2-4mg/kg iv • Neostigmine: if used titrated to effect to avoid cholinergic crisis.
  • 40. • Extubation — • short-acting anesthetics and multimodal analgesia. • avoid medications that interfere with neuromuscular transmission. • adequate ventilation and oxygenation, strength, and the ability to protect the airway.
  • 41. Myasthenic crisis — • severe respiratory muscle and/or bulbar muscle weakness that necessitate intubation or to delay extubation. • In awake patients, signs of impending crisis: dysphagia, change in phonation, obstruction, weak cough, and difficulty handling secretions. • first sign: increase in RR with shallower tidal volume breaths.
  • 42.
  • 43. • Use of accessory muscles or paradoxical movement of the abdomen. • Blood gases: • hypocapnia in spontaneously breathing patients. • increase (pCO2) is a sign of impending respiratory failure • Treatment: • delay extubation, as well as intensive care. • plasma exchange or IV immune globulin, in addition to immunomodulating therapy.
  • 44. Cholinergic crisis — • Patients receiving anticholinesterases are at risk. • manifested by paradoxical weakness along with other signs of cholinergic excess, • after administration of an anticholinesterase for reversal. • If suspected, atropine (0.4 to 2 mg IV) or glycopyrrolate (0.2 to 1 mg IV).
  • 45. • References • Morgan and Mikhail’s clinical anaesthesiology 6th edition • Miller’s Anaesthesia 8th edition • Barash’s clinical Anaesthesia, 8th edition • Uptodate 2019

Editor's Notes

  1. ocular—> facial—>bulbar—> truncal —> limb muslces disease remain ocular in 16 % of patients
  2. transient NMG- 21% infants born to mother with MG, symptoms- feeble cry, poor feeding effort, respi difficulty, general and fcial weakness, and ptosis.
  3. Bulbar symptoms may predispose to aspiration
  4. To minimize respiratory depression on emergence from anaesthesia.