Perioperative Management Conundrum for a Case With Multiple Commonly Used Drug Hypersensitivity
Vikash Bansal, Habib Md R Karim, Abhishek K Rai, Dipak Bhuyan, Sanjay Kumar

TL;DR
This paper discusses the challenges of managing a patient with allergies to multiple common perioperative drugs, highlighting the complexities in avoiding adverse reactions during surgery.
Contribution
The paper presents a rare case of a patient with hypersensitivity to multiple commonly used perioperative medications and outlines the management approach taken.
Findings
The patient exhibited hypersensitivity to diclofenac and paracetamol, necessitating their avoidance during surgery.
Mefenamic acid was effective in managing postoperative fever in a patient allergic to other NSAIDs.
The case highlights the need for careful allergy profiling and tailored perioperative drug selection.
Abstract
Perioperative hypersensitivity reactions vary from mild to potentially fatal anaphylaxis, resulting in significant morbidity and mortality. Most of the perioperative hypersensitivity and allergic reactions are attributed to antibiotics, antiseptic solutions, latex, and opioids. In the current thrust for opioid-free anesthesia, owing to its multiple advantages, paracetamol and nonsteroidal antiinflammatory agents play a significant role in multi-modal pain and inflammatory response management. Nearly nine out of ten individuals experience postoperative pain, one-third experience postoperative nausea and vomiting, and one-fourth experience fever, irrespective of surgery and type of anesthesia, often as an inflammatory response. While perioperative hypersensitivity reactions are common, a patient allergic to multiple commonly used drugs for the treatment of pain, fever, acid-peptic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDrug-Induced Adverse Reactions · Anesthesia and Pain Management · Nausea and vomiting management
