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Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

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Page 1: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Chuck Magich, CRNA, MSUniversity of Maryland Medical CenterR Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center

Baltimore, MDOctober 2013

Page 2: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Definition of MHInherited skeletal muscles disorder triggered in

susceptible individuals when exposed to certain anesthetic agents resulting in:

• hypermetabolism• skeletal muscle damage

• hyperthermia• eventual death if untreated

Page 3: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Background1962 1st MH case described

(Denborough)1979 Dantrolene FDA approved, greatly

reduces mortality1980’s susceptible swine prove to be

most reliable animal models in study of MH

1990’s Focus on genetics to isolate responsible gene

2000 Properly treated, mortality still approx 10%

2002 5 of 9 US testing centers close due to budget cuts

Page 4: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Basic Physiology

Actin & myosin filaments • slide across each other • causes muscle shortening &

contraction.Calcium controls muscle

contraction: • Contraction: Calcium

released (stored in sarcoplasmic reticulum).

• Relaxation: calcium’s reuptake.

Page 5: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

PathophysiologyTriggering agents (MH pt)

Calcium: Massive release + Reuptake blocked

Sustained muscle contraction

*Ryanodine Receptor = gatekeeper Calcium release & reuptake.*

Page 6: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Course of Events in MH Elevated Calcium Acidosis ATP depletion

Hallmarks of MH: 1.increased CO2 production 2.increased O2 consumption

Muscle contractionHeat Prod. (peripheral)Cellular death

Page 7: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Causes of MHRyanodine receptor (RYR1) mutations

responsible for majority of MH cases.However, as many as 30 (or more 80)

different mutations may be responsible for MH = (inconsistent presentation).

Page 8: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Mode of TransmissionAutosomal dominant

inheritance."Dominant" = only 1

mutated gene of a pair needed to posses trait.

Offspring of patient with MH have a 50% chance of inheriting the gene for MH.

Page 9: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

IncidenceAdults 1:20,000-1:50,000Children 1:15,000 After puberty, males affected > females 1.5 : 1Geographic patterns (states with highest

incidence):West VirginiaMichigan WisconsinNebraska

Page 10: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Mortality & MorbidityNorth American MH Registry

291 MH cases (1987-2006)8 cardiac arrests (2.7%)

4 died (1.4%)Mean age = 20 y/o

Mortality higher in ambulatory setting (21%) compared to hospital cases (7%)

Page 11: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Triggering Agents (Avoid These!!!)

All Halogenated inhalational agents: Isoflurane Sevoflurane Desflurane Halothane

Depolarizing Muscle Relaxant: Succinlycholine

(Anectine)

Page 12: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Non-Triggers (Safe to Use)N2ONondepolarizing

MRNarcoticsBenzodiazepinesPropofolEtomidateBarbiturates

KetamineLocal anesthetics

o ester or amideo +/-

vasoconstrictorsNMB reversalsVasoactive drugsCatecholamines

Page 13: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Food For Thought…MH can occur

anywhere triggers are given (ED, ICU).

MH can have delayed onset, usually presenting within 2* after triggers (PACU).

Only use triggers like succ when clearly indicated.

Page 14: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Clinical Presentation 1. Unexplained

tachycardia (earliest, most consistent sign, seen in 96% of cases)

2. Suddenly increased & rising ETCO2 (2-3X’s normal, despite adequate MV)

3. Muscle rigidity (75-80%)

4. Cyanosis (70%)5. Hemodynamic

instability (85%), BP initially then

Page 15: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Clinical Presentation

Less Common Signs:6. Masseter muscle rigidity (50%)7. Tachypnea8. Rhabdomyolysis9. PVC’s and VT10. Exhausted CO2 absorber11. Labs:

Ca, K, CPK, myoglobin, lactate

mixed venous O2 & pH12. Marked temperature elevation

Page 16: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

More About Temperature…Hyperthermia is a late & inconsistent sign!!!If present, very specific sign!Skin temp doesn’t adequately reflect core temp.Can rise 1* Celsius Q 5 mins, may reach 43*C

(110*F).Cold environments may mask temp rise (large field,

cold room, CPB).

Page 17: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Temperature MonitoringSites in order of

preference:1) Pulmonary artery2) Distal esophagus3) Nasopharynx4) Tympanic5) Bladder6) Axilla7) Forehead skin

Page 18: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Differential Diagnosis

1. Thyroid storm2. Pheochromocytoma3. Sepsis4. Light anesthesia5. Drug reaction6. OD – cocaine, amphetamines, ecstasy7. Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome (NMS)8. CO2 insufflation during laparoscopy

Page 19: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Clinical Management1. Discontinue triggers:

• Get HELP –STAT! • Get MH cart. • Inform surgeon stop surgery!

2. Hyperventilate: • 3-4 x’s normal minute

volume.• 100% O2 @ high flows. • via “clean” source – ambu

bag.

3. Dantrolene:• 2.5 mg/kg rapid IV push.• repeat Q 5-30 minutes. • shortcut: approx 1 mg/lb.

Page 20: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Management4. Multiple large bore IV’s (central line)5. Foley (3-way): monitor urine + active

cooling6. A-line to monitor BP and serial lab draws.7. Monitor core temp continuously. 8. Bicarb 1-2 mEq/kg given empirically.9. Active core cooling measures:

gastric lavage foley irrigation ice packs iced (or room temp) IVF hypothermia blanket cold irrigation of surgical field

Page 21: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Management 10. Treat dysrhythmias with usual ACLS drugs:

Ca Ch blockers absolutely contraindicated if Dantrolene given!

Dysrhythmias = tx acidosis + hyperkalemia. Dysrhythmias = need more Dantrolene.

11. Treat hyperkalemia: hyperventilation bicarb diuresis dextrose + insulin(10 units regular insulin /50cc

D50) avoid parenteral potassium (LR) Calcium chloride

Page 22: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Management12. D50 + insulin:

• provides quick acting energy substrate. 13. Prevent myglobin induced renal failure:

non-K IVF: (cold NSS 15 ml/kg Q15 min X3). Mannitol / Lasix: keep U/O >2 ml/kg/hr. Alkalinize urine w/Bicarb.

13. Watch for and treat DIC Check coags. Replace clotting factors (FFP, plts, cryo).

14. Call MH hotline: 1-800-MH-HYPER (1-800-644-9737)

Page 23: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Additional management points:Treatment is labor intensive,

need lots of help fast!Objective of cooling:

decrease O2 consumption CO2 production

Core cooling superior to surface cooling.

Titrate Dantrolene and Bicarb: HRtemp PaCO2 (ETCO2)

Page 24: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Post MH Complications1. DIC: results from cell destruction +

death2. Renal failure: myoglobin induced3. Recrudescence:

24-36 hour windowoccurs in 25% of all MH cases

Page 25: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Follow-upICU monitoring X 24-36*. Dantrolene 1mg/kg IV Q4-6hrs x 24-36*. Next oral Dantrolene X3 days.Dantrolene continued 2* to recrudescence.Register patient:

• North American MH Registry: 1-800-986-4287.

Counsel patient &family:• Potential for MH in other family members. • Refer for testing.

Page 26: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Dantrolene Sodium

Decreases muscle tone & metabolism. Prevents Ca ion release + increases % bound Ca. Direct–acting skeletal muscle relaxant.Doesn’t work @ neuromuscular junction (NMB’s).

Page 27: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

DantrolenePackaged 20 mg per vial:

Reconstitute: 60 ml sterile water (injection). Shake vigorously until clear. Each vial contains 3 gms Mannitol:

• increases solubility of drug.Warming medication /sterile water:

Helps dissolve drug.Dose 2.5 mg/kg rapid IV push,

Repeat Q5-30 mins (HR, ETCO2, temp). Total dose usually <10 mg/kg (4 rounds). One year supply costs approx $2,400

Page 28: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Dosing:Effective does directly related to:1. Individuals degree of susceptibility.2. Amount & time of exposure to triggers.3. Time elapsed between onset of crisis & start of

Dantrolene.

Example: Initial dose for 75 kg patient:75kg x 2.5mg/kg = 188mg188mg / 20mg per vial= 9 vials first 5 minutes

of crisis!

Page 29: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Prevention…food for thought:1/2 all MH episodes proceeded by 1 - 13

uneventful anesthetics! Succinlycholine only on indication:

RSI, difficult airway, full stomach, laryngospasm.

Increased suspicion with history: muscle cramps, heat stroke, caffeine sensitivity.

Blood relatives of MH patient should be considered MH susceptible, unless tested & negative.

MH patients should carry some form of ID Med Alert bracelet, wallet card, etc.

Page 30: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Screening Best way to prevent MH:

o detection prior to anesthesia. Ask pointed questions:

1. Family /personal history: • MH / anesthetic problems?• Muscular / neuromuscular disorders?

2. Family history:• Unexpected deaths under anesthesia?

3. Personal history: • Dark /tea colored urine after surgery?• High fevers after anesthesia?

Page 31: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Planning:• Training of OR + PACU personnel.• Periodic dry-runs of MH crisis.• Monitor core temp on any GA.• No reported deaths from MH in previously

diagnosed MH-susceptible patients when:1. Anesthesia team was aware of the

problem.2. Appropriate precautions taken.

Page 32: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Planning:Have a plan.Portable MH cart / kit

available anywhere general anesthetics administered.

Minimum: 36 vials of Dantrolene

• 4 rounds average sized patient

Page 33: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Management of the MH Susceptible Patient (MHS) 1st case of day. MH cart readily available & Dantrolene not

expired. Continuous monitoring: HR, ETCO2 + temp. Prep gas machine:

1. Remove vaporizers & change soda lime.2. Flush system with 10 lpm O2 via circuit X

20minutes (using disposable bag on end of circuit).

3. Replace with clean circuit & soda lime after flushing.

Page 34: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

MH Susceptible

Dantrolene pretreatment no longer routine. +/- if documented fulminant episode.

Well planned non-trigger anesthetic more advantageous than prophylactic Dantrolene.

Nontrigger technique, 3 options: TIVA (G/A). Regional (spinal / epidural). Local + sedation.

Minimum 2.5 hour PACU.

Page 35: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Conditions Associated with MH1. Central Core disease

2. Duchene’s muscular dystrophy

3. Becker’s or other forms of muscular dystrophy

4. Schwartz-Jampel syndrome

5. King-Denborough syndrome

6. Myotonia Congenita

7. Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome

*Patients with any of the above should not receive triggering agents!!!

Page 36: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Medical-Legal IssuesCommon themes from MH litigation:

1) Failure to obtain a thorough personal history.

2) Failure to monitor temperature.3) Failure to have adequate supplies of

Dantrolene & management plan.4) Failure to investigate increased temp,

increased skeletal muscle tone when associated with tachycardia and dysrhythmias.

Page 37: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

1996 Death from MH 16 year old female 4 hour TMJ surgery Temperature was not monitored during

the case Precipitous rise in ETCO2 at end of case Dysrhythmias and cardiac arrest Temp noted to be >106*F Dantrolene 10 mg/kg Died 2 days later from DIC

Page 38: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

TestingThe caffeine halothane

contracture test (CHCT) is the gold standard of MH diagnosis.

CHCT: Small piece skeletal (thigh) muscle

obtained (local anes). Muscle exposed to:

• caffeine & halothane separately. Rate & force of muscle contraction

recorded electronically. MH susceptible muscle more

sensitive & contracts with greater sustained force than normal muscle.

Page 39: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

CHCT

Top graph: positive for MH, showing muscle contraction after exposure to 3% Halothane.

Normal muscle (bottom).MH + have exaggerated

response to caffeine.Cost approx $6,000-

10,000.CK not a reliable test.

Page 40: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

CHCT SitesUSA:1. USUHS-Bethesda,

MD2. UC-Davis, CA3. University

Minnesota, Minneapolis

4. Wake Forest-Winston-Salem, NC

Canada:1. Ottawa, Ontario2. Toronto, Ontario

Page 41: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Genetic testingBlood test for genetic markers.Less expensive $800-$4,000.Insurance may not cover.Less invasive.Sensitivity 25-30% since only a few of the

known mutations have been isolated.Very specific if positive for one of the known

mutations.Only 2 centers in US:

1) Pittsburg, PA2) Marshfield, WI

Page 42: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Kids & MMR• Masseter muscle rigidity (MMR) / trismus:

Occurs after succinlycholine administration.Forceful contraction of jaw musculature.Prevents full mouth opening.Extremities remain flaccid.

• 1% of children receiving succinlycholine develop MMR

• 50% of these have been shown to be MHsusceptible by muscle biopsy.

Page 43: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Kids & MMR

• Dantrolene need not be administered:1. MMR resolves promptly. 2. No other clinical signs of MH.

• Clinical signs of MH occur in about 20%.• What to do next???• MMR with MH 3X’s more common in males.• MMR mostly in age ranges 4-12 y/o.

Page 44: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Appendectomy in a 35kg, 10y/o – case study (Feb’92)• 10:30 atropine 0.3mg, Fentanyl 50 mcg

premed• 10:40 Propofol 80 mg, Succ 40 mg – MMR,

tachycardia, generalized rigidity• 10:55 Isoflurane 2%, Propofol 20, Atracurium

10mg – persistent spasm and tachycardia• 12:23 pH6.78, pCO2-158, pO2-414, BE-16,

continued rigidity, HR180, Temp 38.4• 13:05 pH6.88, pCO2-85, pO2-365, BE-20,

temp 40.4, HR 220, cardiac arrest

Page 45: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Kids & SuccSudden cardiac

arrest after succ in kids should be attributed to hyperkalemia & treated as such

40 cases since 1990Mortality 50%

Page 46: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Sudden Cardiac Arrest in a Child – Case History• 5y/o male, apparently healthy• 8:00 mask induction with Halothane• 8:05 Succinlycholine 40mg• Intubated with 5.0 ET – leak• Reintubated with #5.5• 8:06 HR 130, then v-fib, then asystole (CPR, atropine, epi,

lidocaine, bretylium, shock)• 8:26 pH 6.81, pCO2 74, pO2 22, BE-21• 11:15 dead despite 2+hour resuscitation• Autopsy:

• Nectrotizing myopathy (gastroc)• CK >63,000• Myoglobin in kidney

Page 47: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Neuroleptic Malignant SyndromeVery similar presentation as MHOnset much slower (days to weeks)Cause: typically antipsychotic & dopamine

blockers: (Thorazine, Haldol, Inapsine, Reglan, Phenergan)

Problem is central in nature, MH is peripheral.Management is drug withdrawal &

symptomatic treatment.Dantrolene can be considered.NMS patients should not receive MH triggers

Page 48: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

1997 Death from MH74 y/o male for AAA repairFamily hx of MH, confirmed by CHCTTrigger agents usedMH episode at end of caseTreated with DantroleneDied 2 days post-op from DIC, renal failure

and ischemic bowel

Page 49: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

ResourcesMalignant Hyperthermia Association

of United States (MHAUS):

PO Box 106939 East State Street

Sherburne, NY 134601-800-98-MHAUS (non-

emergency)1-800-MH-HYPER (emergency #)

http://www.mhaus.org

Page 50: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Thanks for your attention!!!

Page 51: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

References Abraham, R. B., Adnet, P., Glauber, V. & Perel, A (1998). Malignant

Hyperthermia. Postgraduate Medical Journal, 74, 11-17. Barash, P. G., Cullen, B. F. & Stoelting, R. K. (1996). Clinical Anesthesia,

Second Edition (pp.589-602). Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott-Raven Publishers. Bell, C., Hughes, C. W. & Oh, T. H. (1991). The Pediatric Anesthesia Handbook

– Revised Edition (pp. 529-542). Baltimore, MD: Mosby Year Book. Malignant Hyperthermia Association of the United States. (1999). Emergency

Therapy for Malignant Hyperthermia. [Brochure]. Sherburne, NY: Author. Malignant Hyperthermia Association of the United States. (1998). What is

Malignant Hyperthermia? [Brochure]. Sherburne, NY: Author. Malignant Hyperthermia Association of the United States. (1998). Preventing

Malignant Hyperthermia, An Anesthesia Protocol. [Brochure]. Sherburne, NY: Author.

Clinical Update 2000-2001, Managing Malignant Hyperthermia. [Brochure]. Malignant Hyperthermia Association of the United States. Sherburne, NY.

1999/00 Managing Hyperthermia. [Brochure]. Sherburne, NY: Author. Malignant Hyperthermia Association of the United States (1999). What is

MHAUS? [On-Line]. (pp. 1-5). Available: http://www.mhaus.org.

Page 52: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Malignant Hyperthermia Association of the United States (1999). Managing MH: Drugs, Equipment, and the Antidote, Dantrolene Sodium. [On-Line]. (pp. 1-5). Available: http://www.mhaus.org.

Malignant Hyperthermia Association of the United States (1999). Malignant Hyperthermia: A Concern in Dentistry and Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery. [On-Line]. (pp. 1-5). Available: http://www.mhaus.org.

Malignant Hyperthermia Association of the United States (1999). Malignant Hyperthermia: A Concern for OR and PACU Nurses. [On-Line]. (pp. 1-5). Available: http://www.mhaus.org.

Malignant Hyperthermia Association of the United States (1999). Testing for Susceptibility to Malignant Hyperthermia. [On-Line]. (pp. 1-5). Available: http://www.mhaus.org.

Malignant Hyperthermia Association of the United States (1999). Medical ID Program – To Safeguard Against an Emergency. [On-Line]. (pp. 1-3). Available: http://www.mhaus.org.

Malignant Hyperthermia Association of the United States. Understanding Malignant Hyperthermia. (1996). Sherburne, NY.

McIntosh, L. W., (1997). Essentials of Nurse Anesthesia, (pp. 501-503). New York, NY: McGraw-Hill.

Morgan, G. E. & Mikhail, M.S. (1996). Clinical Anesthesiology, 2nd edition, (pp. 513-514, 739-741). Stamford, Ct: Appleton & Lange.

Page 53: Chuck Magich, CRNA, MS University of Maryland Medical Center R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Baltimore, MD October 2013

Rogers, M. C., Tinker, J. H., Covino, B. G. & Longnecker, D. E. (1993). Principles and Practice of Anesthesiology, volume two, (99. 2499-2514). Baltimore, MD: Mosby Year Book.

Rosenberg, Henry (1999). A slide presentation on malignant hyperthermia. http://www.mhaus.org (25 January 2002).

Sauvage, T. R. & Paradise, N. F., (1998). A Comprehensive Certifying Examination Review and Update Course Manual, (pp.177). Valley Anesthesia Educational Programs.

Short, J. A. & Cooper, C. M. S. (1999). Suspected recurrence of malignant Hyperthermia after post-extubation shivering in the intensive care unit, 18-h after tonsillectomy. British Journal of Anesthesia, 82 (6), 945-947.

Stoelting, R. K., (1991). Pharmacology & Physiology in Anesthesia Practice, 2nd ed., (pp. 546-548). Philadelphia, PA: J. B. Lippincott Company.

Waldorf, S. (2003). Update for nurse anesthetists: Neuroleptic Malignant Syndromes. AANA Journal, 71 (5), 289-394.

Yao, F. S. & Artusio, Jr., J. F., (1993). Anesthesiology – Problem Oriented Patient Management, 3rd Edition, (pp. 644-654). Philadelphia, PA: J. B. Lippincott Company.