Acute Macroglossia Post Craniotomy in Sitting Position: A Case Report and Proposed Management Guideline

Int Med Case Rep J. 2020 Aug 31:13:391-397. doi: 10.2147/IMCRJ.S265206. eCollection 2020.

Abstract

Background: Macroglossia is a rare life-threatening postoperative complication in patients undergoing neurosurgical operations in a sitting position. It is difficult to identify the cause of macroglossia, which can be considered multifactorial in most patients.

Case presentation: We herein present a case of a 37-year-old female patient who was known to have a posterior occipital lesion (low-grade glioma with pilocytic features) and underwent occipital craniectomy followed by supratentorial approach for debulking of the tumor under general anesthesia in a sitting position. The patient developed upper airway edema along with extreme macroglossia immediately following extubation, with increasing difficulty in ventilation. Re-intubation was impossible, and urgent tracheostomy was performed. In the intensive care unit (ICU), the macroglossia worsened, and the patient developed sepsis with multi-organ failure and died 16 days postoperatively.

Conclusion: Acute macroglossia can be a catastrophic postoperative complication, necessitating early identification and a systematic approach to this critical event, in addition to being fully prepared to deal with difficult airway should this complication occur.

Keywords: airway obstruction; craniotomy; general anesthesia; macroglossia; postoperative complication; sitting position.

Publication types

  • Case Reports

Grants and funding

This research received no funding.