Massive postpartum hemorrhage is one of the major complications in the peripartum period. In some critical cases, hemostasis is hard to achieve even after a hysterectomy has been performed. Recombinant activated factor VII has been reported as a promising adjuvant therapy for obstetric hemorrhage, although it remains unlicensed for this indication. Eight cases receiving recombinant activated factor VII in postpartum hemorrhage refractory to the conventional therapy in a Taiwanese hospital were analyzed retrospectively. A good response, defined as bleeding control in 15 min, was achieved in six patients (75%) with a single dose ranging from 55 to 105 µg/kg. The two patients with a poor response were later discovered to have had unsolved birth canal injuries. No drug-related adverse effects were noted. We recommend that any surgical bleeding should first be controlled, as well as the correction of metabolic and hematological abnormalities; however, in the situation of intractable postpartum hemorrhage, recombinant activated factor VII offers a salvage therapy and should be considered early, even before hysterectomy.
This is the case report on a 1-year 9-month-old boy suffering from spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia congenita who was successfully intubated with our modified lightwand intubation procedure for general anesthesia to undergo bilateral herniorrhaphy despite the great likelihood of facing a difficult airway because of unstable cervical spine. We bent the pediatric wand after it was encased in an endotracheal (ET) tube of appropriate diameter. The light tip of the wand was let to protrude just out of the bevel of the ET tube. Once the light bulb properly transilluminated the trachea, the ET tube was threaded gently into the trachea. The patient recovered from anesthesia smoothly and was discharged on the next day. This maneuver can facilitate both visual and tactile confirmations of the position and proper tube size. The effectiveness and safety of our modified lightwand intubation procedure is well demonstrated.
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