Spinal anesthesia in a case of Huntington’s Disease

  • Saleem A. Wani Department of Anesthesiology & Critical Care, ESI-PGIMSR, ESI-Hospital, Basaidarapur, New Delhi.
  • Sushil Krishnan Department of Anesthesiology, Northern Railways Central Hospital, New Delhi (India)
  • Anil K Sharma Department of Anesthesiology, Northern Railways Central Hospital, New Delhi (India)
Keywords: Huntington’s disease, Choreiform movements, Spinal anesthesia

Abstract

Amniotic band syndrome (ABS) is a rare condition, potentially associated with a variety of different birth defects. It is also known as ADAM complex (amniotic deformities, adhesion, mutilation), amniotic band sequence, amniotic disruption complex, annular grooves, congenital amputation, congenital constricting bands, Streeter bands, Streeter anomaly, transverse terminal defects of limb, aberrant tissue bands, amniochorionic mesoblastic fibrous strings, and amniotic bands.1 The severity of amniotic band syndrome can range from a single, isolated finding to multiple, disfiguring complications. The arms and legs are most often affected. The head and face and, in some cases, various internal organs can also be affected. General anesthesia is the preferred option for surgical corrections of the anomalies.

Published
01-25-2019
How to Cite
Wani, S. A., Krishnan, S., & Sharma, A. K. (2019). Spinal anesthesia in a case of Huntington’s Disease. Anaesthesia, Pain & Intensive Care, 521-523. Retrieved from https://apicareonline.com/index.php/APIC/article/view/275
Section
Case Reports