General anesthesia with reduced rocuronium and sugammadex reversal safely enabled cesarean section in a patient with inclusion body myositis
This is a case report detailing the anesthetic management for a cesarean section in a 43-year-old pregnant patient with inclusion body myositis. The intervention involved general anesthesia with aspiration precautions, prophylaxis against malignant hyperthermia, a reduced dose of rocuronium, and reversal with sugammadex. The primary outcome was an uneventful extubation within 30 minutes postoperatively. Secondary outcomes included a newborn Apgar score of 10/10 at 1 and 5 minutes after delivery and patient discharge on postoperative day 4, with no complications reported.
The authors note that the perioperative anesthetic management for inclusion body myositis is rarely described. The main limitations of this report are its single-case design and the rarity of such cases. The authors suggest that general anesthesia may be a safe and feasible option for cesarean delivery in IBM patients with precautionary preparations, but they caution against overstating general anesthesia safety in IBM patients based on this single case.