• Anesthesiology · Jan 1980

    Comparative Study

    Epidural anesthesia for cesarean section: a comparison of bupivacaine, chloroprocaine, and etidocaine.

    • S Datta, B C Corke, M H Alper, W U Brown, G W Ostheimer, and J B Weiss.
    • Anesthesiology. 1980 Jan 1;52(1):48-51.

    AbstractThe authors studied three groups of patients undergoing elective cesarean section during lumbar epidural anesthesia with bupivacaine, 0.75 per cent (15 patients), chloroprocaine, 3 per cent (15 patients) or etidocaine, 1 per cent (ten patients). Excellent sensory and motor block were obtained with chloroprocaine and bupivacaine; sensory anesthesia was inadequate with etidocaine in most patients. Onset of anesthesia, induction--delivery interval, and stay in the recovery room were all longer with bupivacaine when compared with chloroprocaine. Fetal outcomes, as determined by Apgar scores, acid--base status and neurobehavioral testing, were equally good in all groups. At delivery, fetal/maternal concentration ratio of bupivacaine was 0.31 and that of etidocaine, 0.25. The umbilical artery--umbilical vein blood concentration difference for etidocaine was significantly higher than that for bupivacaine. Excellent clinical results were obtained using either bupivacaine, 0.75 per cent, alone, or chloroprocaine, 3 per cent- for induction and maintenance of anesthesia, supplemented with bupivacaine, 0.25 per cent, before removal of the catheter.

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