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Misidentification of vagus nerve stimulator for intravenous
access and other major adverse events.
Department
of Neurology and Department of Neurosurgery, Children's National
Medical Center, Washington, DC 20010-1970, USA. ppearl@cnmc.org
The
vagus nerve stimulator has become a standard modality for intractable
pediatric epilepsy. We reviewed our experience with major adverse
events, after accidental puncture of a stimulator wire by an emergency
room physician seeking intravenous access to treat status epilepticus.
The Children's National Medical Center database was reviewed for
patients undergoing vagus nerve stimulator placement between January
1988 and June 2006. Patient characteristics, duration of therapy, and
treatment-limiting adverse events were noted. Of 62 patients implanted
over 8 years, 22 (35%) had adverse events which led to a change in
therapy. Adverse events included prominent drooling, coughing, throat
discomfort, dysphagia, wound infection, difficulty breathing, vomiting,
vocal-cord weakness, lead failure, and iatrogenic (piercing of wire;
surgical clipping of wire during revision). Eight patients required
nonroutine surgical intervention (13%). There were two unusual case
presentations. In a 13-year-old boy with status epilepticus at an
outlying emergency department, the stimulator line was pierced in
search of intravenous access. In a 25-year-old housepainter, neck
paresthesias upon right lateral neck turning were attributed to
insufficient strain relief. Treatment-limiting adverse events occurred
in approximately one-third of patients. Unanticipated adverse events
included misidentification of the wire for intravenous access, clipping
of the wire during surgical dissection, and cervical dysesthesias
associated with head-turning.
PMID: 18358402 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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