Obstetrics and gynecology
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Obstetrics and gynecology · Mar 1987
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialContinuous infusion epidural analgesia with lidocaine: efficacy and influence during the second stage of labor.
A randomized double-blind study evaluated the analgesic efficacy and influence of maintaining a continuous epidural infusion of 0.75% lidocaine during the second stage of labor in nulliparous women. When the cervix was 8 cm or more dilated, unidentified study solution was substituted for the known 0.75% lidocaine solution and continued until delivery. The study solution for 26 patients was 0.75% lidocaine; 27 subjects received saline. ⋯ There was no difference between the groups in the duration of the second stage of labor (73 +/- 63 versus 76 +/- 48 minutes). Operative delivery frequency was similar (31 and 37%), as were umbilical cord blood acid-base values. It is concluded that maintenance of the continuous epidural infusion of 0.75% lidocaine did not prolong the second stage of labor, but it also did not significantly differ from saline in quality of second stage analgesia or frequency of perineal anesthesia.
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Obstetrics and gynecology · Mar 1987
Effect of type of anesthesia on blood loss at cesarean section.
Halogenated anesthetic agents have been used to supplement nitrous oxide during balanced general anesthesia for cesarean delivery to decrease maternal awareness. However, these agents can interfere with uterine contractility and hence have the potential to increase blood loss at the time of cesarean section. ⋯ Significantly more women whose balanced general anesthesia for cesarean section was supplemented with a halogenated agent (usually 0.5% halothane) versus those with a conduction or balanced general anesthetic required transfusion therapy, had a postpartum hematocrit less than 30 vol% and had a decrease in the pre- to postdelivery hematocrit of at least 8 vol %. The addition of halogenated anesthetic agents to a balanced nitrous oxide anesthesia for the purpose of decreased maternal awareness must be weighed against the risk incurred from the increased requirement for blood replacement and/or from postpartum anemia.
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A 37-year-old woman, gravida 10, para 1-0-8-1, presented in her second trimester of pregnancy with complaints of frequent sore throats, change in voice quality, and recumbent dyspnea. These symptoms were noted initially during her previous pregnancy, and resolved after delivery. ⋯ The supraglottic hemangioma is a very rare cause of dyspnea in pregnancy. Its growth during pregnancy and regression postpartum is possibly related to the effects of estrogen and progesterone.
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Recent reports of bipolar sterilization failures have questioned the compatibility of bipolar forceps used with different electrogenerators. Four different bipolar forceps were matched and mismatched with five generators and the electrocoagulation effect was studied by two physicians trained in the histologic evaluation of electrical injury. ⋯ Conversely, when mismatched with other generators the coagulation effect of the Kleppinger forceps fell far below that of other bipolar forceps--matched or mismatched. Each bipolar system should be compatible and its electrocoagulation effect studied before it is used for female sterilization.