International journal of obstetric anesthesia
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Int J Obstet Anesth · Dec 2024
Review"This is how we do it" Maternal and fetal anesthetic management for fetoscopic myelomeningocele repairs: the Texas Children's Fetal Center protocol.
Prenatal repair of myelomeningocele (MMC) is associated with lower rates of hydrocephalus requiring ventriculoperitoneal shunt and improved motor function when compared with postnatal repair. Efforts aiming to develop less invasive surgical techniques to decrease the risk for the pregnant patient while achieving similar benefits for the fetus have led to the implementation of fetoscopic surgical techniques. While no ideal anesthetic technique for fetoscopic MMC repair has been demonstrated, we present our anesthetic approach for these repairs, including considerations for both the pregnant patient and the fetus. ⋯ Additional considerations for the fetus include monitoring, fetal resuscitation strategies, and the theoretical risk of anesthetic neurotoxicity. Postoperatively, we use a multi-modal, opioid sparing regimen for analgesia. As advances in fetal surgery aiming to minimize risk to the pregnant patient alter the surgical approach, maternal-fetal anesthesiologists must adapt and incorporate the unique considerations of fetoscopy into their anesthetic management.
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Int J Obstet Anesth · Dec 2024
On causal inferences from retrospective and observational studies and their implications for neuraxial labor analgesia: the CHRISTMAS* study.
Observational studies should not be used to infer causation as they are prone to confounding factors, selection bias, and reverse causality. Many observational studies of labor analgesia treated epidurals as an independent exposure and concluded that "epidurals" cause dystocia, despite multiple randomized controlled trials showing no effect. We highlight this problem using reductio ad absurdum. We explore whether people request reading glasses when their progressively increasing focal length equals or exceeds their fixed arm length. ⋯ Even if this observational study had demonstrated a strong correlation between age at request for reading glasses and arm length, it would have been absurd to conclude that spectacles somehow cause our arms to shrink. Similarly, women in obstructed labor with a narrow pelvis are more likely to request neuraxial labor analgesia, but "epidurals" do not make their pelvis shrink. Making far-reaching causal inferences based on retrospective or observational data is very shortsighted.