Hi @dawn-debois,
Thanks for your input!
Nowadays most C-sections get spinal anesthesia instead of an epidural if it is planned. This is a different type of blockade than what a C-section does.
I believe the medication you are referring to is a paralytic called succinylcholine. It actually causes any patient to stop breathing because it paralyzes your muscles. This is the intended effect when you need muscle relaxation during surgery and requires the use of a ventilator. It is also used before intubation to open up your vocal cords so we can put the “breathing tube” between them without causing damage to them.
There are several different types of paralytics we use in surgery, but succinylcholine is a depolarizing paralytic which is where the problem lies for LEMS patients. To sum it up, depolarizing paralytics work at your neuromuscular junction. They cause the cells to release all of the acetylcholine in storage which causes paralysis. As you know, LEMS patients already have a shortage of acetylcholine which causes muscle weakness. Due to already having a short supply of acetylcholine, its takes a patient with myasthenia much longer to build this supply back up enough to allow your muscles to become stronger again. This results in needing a ventilator for a longer period of time and a longer “wake up” period.
In the past few years, a drug that reverses paralysis has been developed called Sugammadex which is very helpful for non-depolaring paralytics, however this does not reverse the effects of depolarizing paralytics like succinylcholine. If surgery is necessary for patients with myasthenia (in general), nondepolarizing paralytics should be used instead if absolutely necessary. Most anesthesia providers are very aware of this, but it doesn’t hurt to confirm with them.
Yes, it is actually pretty common that patients require methergine to contract the uterus, which is what I believe you mean. We also sometimes use this in surgery for gynecological cases.
Glad to hear that your babies were healthy anyway!