Editorial Type:
Article Category: Case Report
 | 
Online Publication Date: Jan 01, 2017

Junctional Rhythm Preoperatively and During General Anesthesia for Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery

DDS, PhD,
DDS, and
DDS, PhD
Page Range: 165 – 167
DOI: 10.2344/anpr-64-03-08
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We report a case of junctional rhythm that occurred both preoperatively and later during a portion of general anesthesia. A 19-year-old woman was scheduled to undergo bilateral sagittal split ramus osteotomy after being diagnosed with a jaw deformity. Preoperative electrocardiography (ECG) revealed a junctional rhythm with a slow heart rate (HR). At 90 minutes after anesthesia induction, local anesthesia with 10 mL of 1% lidocaine and 1:100,000 adrenaline was administered. A junctional rhythm appeared 15 minutes after the local anesthesia. We believe that the atrioventricular nodal pacemaker cells accelerated because of the increased sympathetic activity due to the adrenaline. On the preoperative ECG, the junctional rhythm with slow HR appeared as an escaped beat caused by slowing of the primary pacemaker. Therefore, we think that the preoperative junctional rhythm and the junctional rhythm that appeared during general anesthesia were due to different causes. Understanding the cause of a junctional rhythm could lead to more appropriate treatment. We therefore believe that identifying the cause of the junctional rhythm is important in anesthetic management.

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Copyright: © 2017 by the American Dental Society of Anesthesiology
<bold>Figure 1</bold>
Figure 1

Lead II from a preoperative 12-lead electrocardiogram. The patient's heart rate was 48 beats per minute when the retrograde inverted P wave appeared.


<bold>Figure 2</bold>
Figure 2

Electrocardiogram, lead II, during general anesthesia. (A) Normal sinus rhythm changed to a junctional rhythm (normal P wave converted to a retrograde inverted P wave). Heart rate was 85 beats per minute (bpm). (B) Junctional rhythm changed to normal sinus rhythm (retrograde inverted P wave converted to a normal P wave). Heart rate was 80 bpm.


Contributor Notes

Address correspondence to Dr Naotaka Kishimoto, Department of Anesthesiology, Osaka Dental University, 1-5-17 Otemae, Chuo-ku, Osaka 540-0008, Japan; kisimoto@cc.osaka-dent.ac.jp.
Received: Jul 04, 2016
Accepted: Sep 21, 2016