Several factors have been reported to be the cause of cardiovascular collapse. Cardiovascular collapses in the orthostatic position, hypovolemia, spinal and neuroaxial anesthesia, shoulder joint surgery in the sitting position under interscalene block, and general anesthesia related to pain and anxiety during venipuncture arose from Bezold-Jarisch reflex (BJR) activation. When these factors take place together, additional effects are generated. Inhalation anesthetics reduce the venous return since they have a direct vasorelaxation effect [
1]. In the beach chair position, decreased venous return becomes more severe from vasorelaxation and myocardial depression effects of inhalation anesthetics. Blood pressure is regulated to maintain hemodynamic stability by various mechanisms [
2]. BJR is a cardioinhibitory reflex that maintains tonic oppression in the vasomotor center [
3]. BJR is defined as the state where heart rate is reduced to less than 50/min, 30/min over five minutes, or where the systolic arterial pressure is less than 90 mmHg [
3]. BJR is activated by various stimuli including hypovolemia, redistribution of blood volume, mental stress, phobia, pain, parasympathetic system activation and sympathetic system repression [
3,
4].
After getting written consent from patients family member, we report the case of a healthy 50-year-old male patient in the beach chair position to undergo shoulder joint surgery under general anesthesia using sevoflurane and suddenly showed severe bradycardia and hypotension.
Case Report
The patient was male, aged 50, 169 cm and 72 kg, and visited the hospital to undergo shoulder joint surgery with a damaged in the right rotator cuff. Although he had diabetes that was diagnosed ten years before, he did not undergo treatment for it; however, blood sugar level had been controlled. Preoperative endocrinologic evaluation revealed no abnormal findings. The patient sometimes complained of palpitations and underwent tests for that in another hospital, but no anomaly was found and he was being followed-up. Nonspecific ST-T wave change was found in the preoperative electrocardiograph. No specific findings were found in the chest radiograph or echocardiogram, and laboratory findings were normal. Premedication was not administered. Vital signs just before induction and after arriving in the operation room were as follows: blood pressure of 160/90 mmHg, heart rate of 70/min, and oxygen saturation of 97%, and electrocardiography showed normal sinus rhythm. Anesthesia was induced with pentothal sodium 300 mg, fentanyl 100 µg, and rocuronium bromide 50 mg, and the endotracheal tube (inner diameter 8.0 mm) was inserted orally. For maintenance of anesthesia, 50% N2O - O2, sevoflurane 3 vol%, and remifentanil 0.05 µg/kg/min were used. After vital signs were stabilized, concentration of sevoflurane was adjusted to 1.5 vol% and atropine sulfate 0.5 mg was intravenously injected just before changing the patient's position from supine to a sitting position (beach chair position 70-80°). One or two minutes after sitting position, heart rate was suddenly reduced from 80/min to 30/min or less, and blood pressure was 70/40 mmHg. But no electrocardiograhic changes were noted. Intravenous injection of atropine sulfate 0.5 mg was immediately given, but heart rate and blood pressure did not change. After stopping the administration of remifentanil and sevoflurane, 1 : 10,000 epinephrine 1 ml (10 µg) was intravenously injected, and the patient was moved to the supine position. Heart rate soon recovered to 90/min, and blood pressure returned to 120/60 mmHg. The results of the arterial blood gas analysis at that time were within normal range. Through the discussion with surgeons, we decided to postpone the operation. Detailed tests were performed a 24-hour electrocardiography and echocardiography, and the patient was suspected of having vasovagal syncope suspect. The head-up tilt testing and circulatory assessment diagnosed BJR as the cause. A sufficient amount of fluid was supplied and a β-sympatholytic was orally administered as the preventive treatment. Following preoperative administration of anticholinergic and sedative, anesthesia was induced well with desflurane and remifentanil. Afterwards, the operation was performed without any specific findings.
Discussion
The hypotension accompanied by bradycardia in this case may appear similar to syncope (i.e., BJR activation). BJR is overlapped by vasovagal syncope, one type of neurocardiogenic syncope, which is caused by reduction of venous return to the heart due to the decrease of peripheral arterial pressure by the neurogenic mechanism [
2]. BJR is a reflex action that causes three signs: vasorelaxation, bradycardia, and hypotension [
3]. Lower extremity muscle contraction is necessary in maintaining venous return to the heart and blood pressure [
3]. General anesthesia as well as epidural anesthesia inhibits such a "muscle pump" and the compensatory arterial and venous constriction. Syncope due to the phobia and pain during general induction has been reported sometimes [
5,
6]; however, it is relatively rare in general anesthesia. Venous congestion caused by the sitting position during shoulder joint surgery under general anesthesia brings about the decrease of intraventricular volume, and rapid preload decrease causes abnormal myocardial contraction by the hypersecretion of catecholamine [
4,
7]. Enhanced myocardial contraction under reduced preload activates mechanical receptors of the heart, abnormally activates parasympathetic system, and brings about repression of sympathetic system. As a result, bradycardia is caused because of reflex vasorelaxation and vagus nerve activation. Paradoxical hypotension and bradycardia can be caused by intracardiac BJR activation because of blood flow dysfunction and vasodilator due to venous blood stasis and the insufficiency of intracardiac blood that leads to vigorous cardiac contraction [
2]. When a headup tilt test is performed, it takes approximately 12-24 minutes until hemodynamic changes, including the decrease of mean arterial blood pressure and heart rate begin, but it may take about one hour if the position is tilted by approximately 60° [
4]. In this case, severe bradycardia started immediately when the sitting position was taken about 20 minutes after induction. There are two types of vasovagal inhibition: vasodilatory (VD) and cardioinhibitory (CI) type [
8]. The VD type consists of a drastic reduction of arterial blood pressure without bradycardia, whereas the CI type is characterized by bradycardia associated with hypotension. The reported frequency of bradycardia and hypotension in the sitting position during interscalene block has been 13-29% [
4,
9-
11]. The severity of bradycardia and hypotension varies ranging from a mild state to cardiac arrest and severe complications such as temporary loss of vision, cerebral and spinal ischemia, and ophthalmoplegia [
1].
Appropriate fluid and β-sympatholytic should be intravenously injected to maintain sufficient volume of blood before BJR takes place, and preventive anticholinergic administration should be performed to repress the vasovagal reflex [
12,
13]. Moreover, the venous return volume should be immediately supplemented by altering position from the sitting to the supine position. Total administered fluid during the operation were about 150 ml in this case. The cephalic region should be lowered and the lower extremity should be lifted up. The reduced ventricular volume caused by the orthostatic position and excessive myocardial contraction induce BJR by stimulating the intracardiac mechanical receptors. Even though atropine sulfate has been used as the only drug to treat the asystole that takes place under general anesthesia, it was not effective in our case [
3]. Sympathomimetic drugs, such as ephedrine and various selective α-agonists, repress venous and arterial vasorelaxation, and the rapid injection of epinephrine has been emphasized as an important factor of successive treatment [
3].
In various studies on the treatment of vasovagal syncope, it was reported that atropine sulfate had efficacy in the CI type but not the VD type, and that studies had not been conducted yet with a sufficient number of patient to make a conclusion with respect to the effectiveness of vasovagal syncope treatment [
8].
Currently, treatment methods for relapsing vasovagal syncope are divided into long-term, oral drug and pacemaking [
8]. These treatment methods serve different purposes: drug treatment is effective in inhibiting initiation of the vasovagal reflex, whereas pacemaking can eliminate the reflex action immediately after symptom appears.
Based on this case, syncope should be examined in a patient who is to undergo the shoulder joint surgery in the sitting position under general anesthesia. If suspected, specific tests such as head-up tilt testing may be necessary. Additionally, in the case of suspected syncope by intraoperative positional change or other causes, the patient should be quickly moved to the supine position, and the selection of appropriate drugs should be taken into consideration.