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Down Syndrome anes implications
Last updated: 03/04/2015
Patients with Down’s syndrome may have an airway complicated by both macroglossia, tonsillar/adenoidal hypertrophy, micrognathia, and a short neck. They may also have obstructive sleep apnea and lax cervical ligaments as well as other cervical abnormalities (ex. odontoid) leading to cervical instability (atlantooccipital instability in 9%). Children and adults may need down-sized endotracheal tubes. ~ 50% of these patients will have congenital heart disease, half of which are cushion defects (ex. AV canal), also ASD, VSD, tetralogy, and PDA. Those that have left-to-right shunts tend to develop pulmonary hypertension before patients without Down’s. Developmental delay is common.
Down’s Syndrome Abnormalities Relevant to the Anesthesiologist
- Airway: Macroglossia, tonsillar/adenoidal hypertrophy, micrognathia, short neck, OSA, cervical instability, small trachea
- Cardiac: Congenital heart disease (in 50%, most commonly endocardial cushion defects)
- Pulmonic: OSA, early development of pulmonary hypertension in L to R shunts
- Neuromuscular: Developmental delay, hypotonia
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