International journal of obstetric anesthesia
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During pregnancy, the thyroid undergoes several changes including altered function and gland enlargement. We describe the management of a 38-week pregnant woman presenting with cough and increasing breathlessness. She gave a 5-year history of asthma which initially obscured the final diagnosis of upper-airway obstruction secondary to tracheal compression by a large retrosternal goitre. ⋯ Delivery by caesarean section was carried out under epidural anaesthesia, following which her symptoms rapidly resolved. A subtotal thyroidectomy was performed 4 weeks later under general anaesthesia, again without incident. We outline the normal physiological changes that occur to the thyroid gland during pregnancy and also highlight the value of the flow volume loop in the evaluation of airway obstruction.
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Int J Obstet Anesth · Jan 1998
Pregnancy and delivery in a patient with recent peripartum cardiomyopathy.
We present a case of successful pregnancy and delivery in a patient with peripartum cardiomyopathy who conceived only 3 months after a vaginal delivery complicated by peripartum cardiomyopathy. Following the onset of labor, an arterial pressure catheter and pulmonary artery catheter were placed. ⋯ After a few hours of labor, the fetal heart rate tracing revealed repetitive variable decelerations, and a decision was made to proceed with operative delivery. The mother's hemodynamic changes are presented, and the specifics of the anesthetic care are outlined.
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Int J Obstet Anesth · Jan 1998
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialProphylactic ephedrine and hypotension associated with spinal anesthesia for cesarean delivery.
Hypotension commonly accompanies induction of spinal anesthesia for cesarean section. To determine whether intravenous ephedrine prophylaxis would benefit prehydrated obstetrical patients presenting for elective cesarean section, we studied 30 patients randomly assigned to one of three experimental groups. All patients were preloaded with crystalloid (15 ml/kg), given spinal anesthesia and positioned with left uterine displacement (LUD). ⋯ Hypotension occurred in 6/10 control patients, 5/10 bolus patients and 5/10 infusion patients. The amount of supplemental ephedrine required to treat hypotension did not differ among groups. Although the efficacy of ephedrine prophylaxis for hypotension associated with spinal anesthesia for elective cesarean section cannot be established by the small number of patients studied, this practice does not appear to be clinically relevant at the doses studied.
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Int J Obstet Anesth · Jan 1998
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialEpidural lidocaine for cesarean delivery of the distressed fetus.
Lidocaine with epinephrine and sodium bicarbonate has a rapid onset of action. We therefore wished to compare its use with that of chloroprocaine for urgent cesarean delivery. Thirty parturients for cesarean section under epidural anesthesia were divided into three groups. ⋯ Lidocaine was detectable in maternal serum from four of the urgent cases and all of the elective cases. It was detectable in five neonates from the elective group but none from the emergency group. In parturients with preexisting epidural catheters and a baseline epidural infusion to maintain a T10 sensory level, chloroprocaine is faster in onset than lidocaine, but the difference in this study was only 1.3 min, and both agents provided excellent anesthesia.