Case Studies
Anaesthesia Implications and Considerations in a Case of Pemphigus Vulgaris for Orthopaedic Bipolar Prothesis Implant Surgery - A Case Report
Southern African Journal of Anaesthesia and Analgesia | Vol 16, No 2 | a421 |
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/22201173.2010.10872670
| © 2010 Sukhminder Jitsingh Bajwa, Jasbir Kaur, Sukhwinder Kaur Bajwa, Geetika Bakshi
| This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 03 November 2025 | Published: 01 April 2010
Submitted: 03 November 2025 | Published: 01 April 2010
About the author(s)
Sukhminder Jitsingh Bajwa,, IndiaJasbir Kaur,, India
Sukhwinder Kaur Bajwa,, India
Geetika Bakshi,, India
Full Text:
PDF (456KB)Abstract
A 60-year-old patient suffering from pemphigus vulgaris for the past year was admitted to the emergency ward for fracture neck of femur. She also presented with lesions involving oral mucosa, back, inframammary and genital areas which were in partial remission. In hospital she was diagnosed with hypertension and was put on anti-hypertensives. Special attention was paid during positioning for surgery, administration of regional anaesthesia and placement of the intravenous line as well as monitoring devices. General anaesthesia was avoided in the presence of partially active oral lesions. Combined spinal-epidural anaesthesia was administered using bupivacaine-clonidine mixture. No haemodynamic complication was observed with 30 μg of clonidine intrathecally and no skin lesion occurred at the site of injections or Tegaderm application.
Keywords
Pemphigus vulgaris, bupivacaine-clonidine mixture, intrathecal clonidine, Koebner phenomenon, Neuraxial opiods.
Metrics
Total abstract views: 230Total article views: 34
Crossref Citations
1. Beyond the Skin: Anesthetic Challenges in a Parturient with Pemphigus Vulgaris
Yaal Elango, Stalin Vinayagam
International Journal of Advanced Medical and Health Research vol: 12 issue: 2 first page: 127 year: 2025
doi: 10.4103/ijamr.ijamr_102_25
