Affiliation:
1. Department of Anesthesia and Perioperative Care University of California San Francisco San Francisco California USA
Abstract
SummaryMyoclonus is a known side effect of propofol and can interfere with surgery and possibly precipitate patient injury. Here, we report a 23‐year‐old patient undergoing an L5 osteoblastoma resection with a predominantly propofol‐based anaesthetic who developed intra‐operative myoclonus. Other adjuncts included ketamine, lidocaine and fentanyl infusions. The myoclonus did not improve after deepening the anaesthetic with propofol, opioid boluses or discontinuation of the lidocaine infusion. The myoclonus ceased after reducing the propofol infusion and increasing the ketamine and opioid infusions. The remainder of the intra‐operative course was uneventful. This report details our intra‐operative management of propofol‐induced cortical reflex myoclonus and discusses our institution's experience with treating this phenomenon.
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine