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A benign cause for a unilateral dilated pupil in a critical care patient

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 August 2008

H. P. Krovvidi*
Affiliation:
Anaesthetics, Russells Hall Hospital, Dudley, UK
A. Thillaivasan
Affiliation:
Anaesthetics, Russells Hall Hospital, Dudley, UK
*
Anaesthetics, Russells Hall Hospital, Dudley, DY1 2HQ, UK. E-mail: haridoc6@gmail.com; Tel: +44 121 6940449; Fax: +44 1384 2244051

Abstract

Type
Correspondence
Copyright
Copyright © European Society of Anaesthesiology 2008

EDITOR:

‘Anisocoria’ (a unilateral dilated pupil) in critical care patients is a point of concern, which warrants a thorough examination and often, also, costly investigations to rule out a serious cause. We however, encountered a patient in our intensive therapy unit who had a more benign reason.

Case report

A 38-yr-old female patient presented to hospital with acute severe asthma. She was subsequently admitted to the critical care unit requiring intubation and positive pressure ventilation, back-to-back salbutamol and ipratropium nebulizers along with intravenous aminophylline and hydrocortisone. After 8 h of the above treatment her bronchospasm settled and she was extubated uneventfully. A few minutes later though, her nurse noticed that whilst her right pupil was both normal in size and in responsiveness to light, her left pupil was fully dilated. A prompt central and peripheral nervous system examination was unremarkable. But a further detailed examination revealed that the patient was receiving her salbutamol and ipratropium through an in-circuit nebulizer system, which not only was closer to the left side of her face but also had a small leak in it.

Discussion

Ipratropium bromide is known to cause ‘mydriasis’ (pupillary dilation) due to it antagonizing acetylcholine at the cholinergic receptors in the eye [Reference Jannun and Mickel1]. Furthermore, the effects of ipratropium on pupils are usually due to local and not systemic absorption. Anisocoria caused by ipratropium nebulizers given via poorly fitting face masks were described in previous case reports [Reference Helprin and Clarke2]. In our case the cause of the leak of ipratropium was from an in-circuit nebulizer system. A quick and thorough bedside examination and early detection of the source of the problem saved us from performing more invasive and costly investigations.

References

1.Jannun, DR, Mickel, SF. Anisocoria and aerosolised anticholinergics. Chest 1986; 90: 148149.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2.Helprin, GA, Clarke, GM. Unilateral fixed dilated pupil associated with nebulised ipratropium bromide. Lancet 1986; 2: 1469.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed