International journal of obstetric anesthesia
-
Int J Obstet Anesth · Nov 2024
Case ReportsNovel approaches facilitating neuraxial anesthesia placement in pregnant women with morbid obesity: case descriptions.
Clinical management of pregnant women with morbid obesity poses challenges in performing neuraxial anesthesia as well as positioning for cesarean delivery. Occupational injuries are also known to occur while caring for patients with morbid obesity. We describe two novel approaches to assist neuraxial anesthesia administration and positioning for cesarean delivery. ⋯ This is particularly useful when the traditional taping of fat folds away from the site is inadequate. The pannus retractor results in a flatter surface facilitating epidural placement. We have introduced these two approaches into our clinical practice for pregnant women with morbid obesity requiring cesarean delivery under neuraxial anesthesia.
-
Int J Obstet Anesth · Nov 2024
Case ReportsNeuraxial labor analgesia in a parturient with carnitine palmitoyl transferase type II deficiency: a case report.
Carnitine Palmitoyl Transferase Type II (CPT II) deficiency is a disorder of fatty acid beta oxidation that causes decreased adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and ketone production during periods of fasting or high energy requirements. Labor and delivery can precipitate attacks for parturients with this disorder, causing hypoglycemia, muscle weakness, rhabdomyolysis, and kidney failure. Anesthetic management considers the delivery mode and anesthetic medications available to reduce these risks. We present the case of a pregnant patient with CPT II deficiency with labor epidural analgesia and a vaginal delivery, with alternative plans had a different delivery mode been required.
-
Int J Obstet Anesth · Nov 2024
Pain during caesarean delivery in a tertiary maternity hospital: a retrospective cohort study (2022-2023).
Intra-operative pain during Caesarean delivery (PDCD) is the leading cause of successful litigation against obstetric anaesthesiologists. PDCD may require conversion to general anaesthesia (GA). The aim of this analysis is to assess our incidence of PDCD and associated GA conversion. ⋯ PDCD occurred in 2.1% of CD, one-third required conversion to GA. Most patients experiencing PDCD met current motor and sensory blockade criteria.
-
Int J Obstet Anesth · Nov 2024
Peripartum anesthesia management and outcomes of patients with congenital heart disease: a single-center retrospective analysis (2009-2023).
Advances in medicine have enabled more patients with congenital heart disease (CHD) to become pregnant. However, these patients face significant challenges during the peripartum period. Current peripartum anesthesia guidelines for CHD patients mainly rely on case reports and small series. ⋯ In this retrospective study on the peripartum anesthetic management and outcomes of CHD patients stratified by mWHO class, cases with greater mWHO class were more likely to deliver preterm, by cesarean delivery, with a combined spinal-epidural anesthetic and an arterial line placement for that cesarean delivery. They overall had a longer hospital stay and were more likely to be admitted to the ICU. However, the overall risk of PPH did not increase with mWHO class severity.
-
Int J Obstet Anesth · Nov 2024
Rate of difficult intubation during caesarean delivery: A single centre before/after standardised airway management implementation study.
The use of general anaesthesia (GA) for caesarean delivery (CD) introduces the risk of both difficult and failed intubation. Various strategies may be utilised to reduce this risk; however, not all are supported by evidence. We analysed the rate of difficult intubation following implementation of three recommendations specific to airway management in CD. ⋯ Implementation of standardised airway management recommendations had no significant impact on difficult intubation rate, though adoption of all three recommendations was not universal.