Radiology Case Reports (Feb 2023)

The unpredictability of labile blood pressure: Afferent baroreflex failure in a critical patient with multiple thyroid surgeries and COVID-19 infection

  • Anas Mahmoud, MD,
  • Brooke Kania, DO,
  • Shady Geris, DO,
  • Wadah Akroush, MD,
  • Rajapriya Manickam, MD,
  • Moh'd Hazem K Azzam, MD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 2
pp. 715 – 718

Abstract

Read online

The carotid sinus-arterial baroreflex is essential in maintaining blood pressure (BP) regulation. Afferent baroreflex failure (ABF) can present with labile changes in BP within seconds and can be secondary to neck surgery or radiation. We present here the first case, to our knowledge, of ABF precipitated by thyroidectomy, in a patient with active COVID-19 pneumonia, causing difficult control of severely labile BP in a critical care unit. Contributing factors included her critical illness state with upregulation of IL-6 leading to pituitary-adrenal axis alteration, her thyroidectomy further exacerbating autonomic dysfunction, as well as downregulation of ACE2 via COVID-19 infection. Management was achieved with a combination of midodrine and clonidine catered to specific BP thresholds. Additional research with a multidisciplinary approach is warranted to fully optimize the treatment of ABF in patients with neck surgery and or inflammatory conditions such as COVID-19.

Keywords