I thought I'd share this sad but interesting case to see if anyone has any input/experience. I have had a very sick 56 y/o male with covid. 10 days in. Intubated. Max vent 100% FIO2 doing poorly. Suddenly - two days ago - he spikes a temp of 108 deg F!! Concomitantly, he develops acute renal failure (Cr 0.8 to 3.9), shock, severe hypercarbia (CO2 50s to 95). Meds included propofol, precedex and fentanyl due to severe psychomotor agitation. Vancomycin for strep mitis bacteremia, and the usual covid meds. No volatile anesthetics/gas, no succinycholine, no antipsychotics or other offending agents seen with MH.
Anywany, inexorably, over next 24 hrs temps remain 107-108. Dantrolene is given with no effect. Cooling blankets. Propopfol and precedex are stopped. Head CT neg. Progressive shock and renal failure continue. He passed last night. No autopsy.
CK was 1000. +myoglobulinuria.
This pattern is classic MH. I don't think the bacterial infection caused this. Is covid related? If so - how? Has anyone seen a fever this high with cytokine storm?
Propofol syndrome? Maybe but I have not seen temps that high with it.
I thought about adrenal apoplexy, but we were'nt able to get an abd CT.
He may have had the autosomal dominant mutation described in MH pts of the ryanodine receptor (rare) but who knows.
A mystery. As is so often the case in medicine. And covid makes it harder to understand.
Anywany, inexorably, over next 24 hrs temps remain 107-108. Dantrolene is given with no effect. Cooling blankets. Propopfol and precedex are stopped. Head CT neg. Progressive shock and renal failure continue. He passed last night. No autopsy.
CK was 1000. +myoglobulinuria.
This pattern is classic MH. I don't think the bacterial infection caused this. Is covid related? If so - how? Has anyone seen a fever this high with cytokine storm?
Propofol syndrome? Maybe but I have not seen temps that high with it.
I thought about adrenal apoplexy, but we were'nt able to get an abd CT.
He may have had the autosomal dominant mutation described in MH pts of the ryanodine receptor (rare) but who knows.
A mystery. As is so often the case in medicine. And covid makes it harder to understand.