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    Subjects/Anesthesia/Malignant Hyperthermia
    Malignant Hyperthermia
    medium
    syringe Anesthesia

    A 35-year-old male patient is scheduled for elective abdominal surgery under general anesthesia. After induction with propofol and succinylcholine, the anesthesiologist observes a sustained increase in end-tidal CO₂ (ETCO₂) from 35 mmHg to 55 mmHg within 10 minutes, along with muscle rigidity and a rise in core body temperature. Which of the following is the most appropriate immediate management?

    A. Administer succinylcholine again to relax muscles and reduce ETCO₂
    B. Switch to total intravenous anesthesia (TIVA) with propofol and maintain current anesthetic depth
    C. Continue anesthesia with volatile agent, increase minute ventilation, and monitor temperature closely
    D. Discontinue all triggering agents, hyperventilate with 100% oxygen, and administer dantrolene sodium 2.5 mg/kg IV

    Explanation

    ## Malignant Hyperthermia (MH) Recognition and Management The clinical presentation describes **malignant hyperthermia (MH)**, a pharmacogenetic crisis triggered by exposure to succinylcholine and/or volatile anesthetics. ### Key Diagnostic Features: - **Sustained hypercarbia** (ETCO₂ >50 mmHg) — earliest and most sensitive sign - **Muscle rigidity** — due to sustained muscle contraction - **Hyperthermia** — late sign; core temperature rise is NOT the earliest indicator - Tachycardia, arrhythmias, cyanosis, and rhabdomyolysis may follow ### Immediate Management Protocol (MHAUS Guidelines): 1. **Stop all triggering agents immediately** (succinylcholine and volatile anesthetics) 2. **Hyperventilate with 100% O₂** to wash out volatile agent and combat hypercarbia 3. **Administer dantrolene sodium 2.5 mg/kg IV** — inhibits calcium release from sarcoplasmic reticulum, terminating the MH crisis 4. Continue dantrolene 1 mg/kg IV every 5 minutes until signs resolve or max 10 mg/kg reached 5. **Active cooling measures** (cold IV fluids, ice packs, cold peritoneal lavage) 6. **Monitor for complications**: rhabdomyolysis, hyperkalemia, acute kidney injury, DIC 7. **Post-operative ICU monitoring** for recrudescence (can occur 24–48 hours later) **Clinical Pearl:** Early recognition and prompt dantrolene administration are life-saving. Mortality has dropped from ~80% (pre-dantrolene era) to <5% with modern protocols. **High-Yield:** ETCO₂ elevation is the **earliest and most sensitive sign** of MH — more reliable than temperature in the acute phase.

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