Preemptive volume therapy to prevent hemodynamic changes caused by the beach chair position: hydroxyethyl starch 130/0.4 versus Ringer's acetate—a controlled randomized trial

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Abstract Background Isolated vocal cord palsy resulting hoarseness after shoulder surgery in beach-chair position had not been reported in literature to date. The purpose of this study was to review its incidence in our patient cohort, and identify any risk factors that may predispose the patient to the injury.Methods There were 10215 operative shoulder cases from January 2010 to December 2017. Inclusion criteria was any post-operative patients, whose operation was performed under general anesthesia in beach-chair position, who had the related symptoms, but the diagnoses had to be confirmed by otorhinolaryngologists with laryngoscopy studies. The affected patients’ clinical notes were retrospectively reviewed with the particular interest in the operative times, and the peri-operative cervical spine radiographs. The degree of cervical spine lordosis was assessed using a method described in literature, in which ‘absolute rotation angle’ (ARA) was measured. Results There were 8 reported cases of vocal cord injury in total (0.08%). Four were male patients and four were arthroscopic cases. The mean age was 59.4 ± 11.9 years old. No particular difficulties with positioning or intubation were documented. The average duration of anesthetic times was 141 minutes. On peri-operative cervical spine radiographs, the average lordosis was 8.2° (1.5° kyphosis - 21° lordosis), and except for one patient, all had ‘non-lordotic’ type curvatures. All but one patient had recovered fully with observation and expectant management, with the average recovery time being 19 weeks (range: 2 weeks to 1 year). Only patient who had not recovered during our 2-year follow-up period, had a ‘sigmoidal’ type cervical spine and was also managed with observation only.Conclusions The incidence of vocal cord injury with beach-chair positioning at our institution was low at 0.08%. The possible risk factors include long duration of the procedure and ‘non-lordotic’ cervical spine, as demonstrated by the trend in our study. Although rare, vocal cord injury has varying duration of recovery time, in the worst-case scenario being permanent, therefore it needs to be avoided by taking utmost care during positioning of the patient in beach-chair. Level of Evidence Level IV, case series


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