Journal of clinical anesthesia
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Review Case Reports
The difficult airway in obstetric anesthesia: techniques for airway management and the role of regional anesthesia.
A case is presented illustrating the use of a continuous spinal anesthetic in a parturient with a difficult airway who required urgent cesarean delivery. Options for endotracheal intubation of a parturient with a difficult airway are reviewed. ⋯ Available data suggest that regional anesthesia, specifically continuous spinal anesthesia, may be a safe and effective option for management of a parturient with a difficult airway. Further investigation of this technique is merited.
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Data on all obstetric patients delivering at the Brigham and Women's Hospital during the years 1982 through 1987 were collected. The anesthetic techniques used, the type and amount of anesthetic agents administered, and the postpartum relapse rate of multiple sclerosis patients were compared. ⋯ However, all of the women who experienced postpartum relapses had received concentrations of bupivacaine greater than 0.25%. This finding may suggest that a higher concentration of drug over a longer period of time may adversely influence the relapse rate.
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The utility of integrated pulse and pulmonary artery oximetry, known as dual oximetry, was evaluated by monitoring 10 critically ill surgical patients for a total of 208 patient hours. The ventilation-perfusion index (VQI), an estimate of venous admixture, and the oxygen extraction index (O2EI), an estimate of tissue oxygen utilization coefficient, previously described, were calculated on-line from arterial and mixed venous oxyhemoglobin saturations using a computer. Effective monitoring was accomplished 85% of the total time. ⋯ Dual oximetry appears to be a technically reliable and accurate method of monitoring pulmonary gas exchange and tissue oxygen utilization. The equipment provided stable readings for at least six hours without recalibration. Random variability is sufficiently small to allow early detection of alterations in pulmonary and circulatory function without blood sampling.