Oxygen embolism caused by accidental subcutaneous injection of hydrogen peroxide during orthopedic surgery: A case report
- Abstract
- Introduction: We report a 39-year-old male patient with a fracture of the right acetabulum undergoing open reduction and internal
fixation with a plate under general anesthesia. At closure, the surgeons injected 0.75% ropivacaine into the subcutaneous tissue of
the incision wound for postoperative analgesia. Soon after injection, subcutaneous emphysema at the injection site and a sudden
decrease in end-tidal CO2 tension with crude oscillatory ripples during the alveolar plateau phase were observed. Shortly thereafter, it
was found that the surgeons had mistakenly injected hydrogen peroxide instead of ropivacaine. Fortunately, the patient recovered to
normal status after 10 minutes. After the surgery, the patient was carefully observed for suspected pulmonary embolism and
discharged without complications.
Conclusion:Adverse events related to medication errors can occur in operating rooms, and most cases can be prevented through
communication and verification by medical staff. The use of hydrogen peroxide should be reevaluated; when used, medical staff
should be aware of the risk of oxygen embolism and take extreme care.
- All Author(s)
- J. Chung
; M. Jeong
- Issued Date
- 2017
- Type
- Article
- Keyword
- hydrogen peroxide; medication error; oxygen embolism
- Publisher
- Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
- ISSN
- 0025-7974
; 1536-5964
- Citation Title
- Medicine
- Citation Volume
- 96
- Citation Number
- 43
- Citation Start Page
- e8342
- Citation End Page
- e8342
- Language(ISO)
- eng
- DOI
- 10.1097/md.0000000000008342
- URI
- http://schca-ir.schmc.ac.kr/handle/2022.oak/2439
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