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Lidocaine not so innocent: Cardiotoxicity after topical anaesthesia for bronchoscopy

Publication at Second Faculty of Medicine |
2012

Abstract

We remember a 75-year-old man after coronary revascularization who was extubated early. However, on the first post-operative day, he developed shortness of breath due to left lower lobe atelectasis with haemoglobin saturation 92% on oxygen via face mask.

He was indicated to bronchoscopy to remove the mucous plug. Topical anaesthesia was induced by transtracheal injection of 2 ml 4% lidocaine and by application of 10 puffs of 10% lidocaine spray.

Each puff was 10 mg. During insertion of the bronchoscope, the patient coughed.

The bronchoscopist therefore applied additional five puffs of lidocaine spray, i.e. the total dose was 230 mg (3 mg/kg; maximum dose according to the Summary of Product Characteristics 20 puffs) being administered during 10 min. Shortly after the additional doses, the patient lost consciousness and, on the electrocardiogram monitor, slow and wide QRS complexes were suddenly seen.

The patient was immediately intubated and connected to a ventilator. Bradycardia was treated with atropine but without any obvious effect.

Cardiac pacing via epicardial leads was therefore commenced, and it quickly restored normal heart rate and blood pressure. The patient was sedated with intravenous midazolam to perform the bronchoscopy.

Shortly after the procedure, he regained consciousness and was extubated because he breathed sufficiently. The pacer could also be switched off.

Further clinical course was uneventful and without troponin elevation. We think the event was due to the systemic effect of lidocaine on the brain (loss of consciousness) and heart (bradycardia unresponsive to atropine with widening of QRS complexes due to sodium channel block) after rapid absorption from the site with a rich blood supply.

This conclusion is confirmed by close temporal relationship between lidocaine application and development of toxicity and by rapid subsiding of the heart block. The extreme sensitivity to lidocaine could be explained by a diminished binding capacity of blood proteins (serum albumin level after extracorporeal circulation 40-50 g/L) and possibly by reduced hepatic clearance.