Obstetrics and gynecology
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Obstetrics and gynecology · Mar 1991
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialNifedipine in the treatment of severe preeclampsia.
We conducted a randomized clinical trial in which patients with severe preeclampsia between 26-36 weeks of gestation received either nifedipine (10-30 mg sublingually, then 40-120 mg/day orally; N = 24) or hydralazine (6.25-12.5 mg intravenously, then 80-120 mg/day orally; N = 25). Effective control of blood pressure was achieved with nifedipine in 95.8% of subjects and with hydralazine in 68%, a statistically significant difference (P less than .05). Maternal side effects were minor in both groups. ⋯ Infants born to women treated with nifedipine were delivered at more advanced gestational ages (34.6 +/- 2.3 versus 33.6 +/- 2.4 weeks; statistically not significant), weighed more (1826 +/- 456 versus 1580 +/- 499 g; statistically not significant), and tended to have fewer, mainly minor, complications. The average number of days spent in the neonatal intensive care unit was significantly lower in the nifedipine group (15.1 versus 32.7 days; P less than .005), leading to an average 31% reduction in total (maternal and neonatal) hospitalization-related charges for each nifedipine-treated pregnancy. We conclude that nifedipine is an effective, convenient, and low-cost treatment for patients with severe preeclampsia, and is not associated with undesirable side effects.
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Obstetrics and gynecology · Mar 1991
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialPatient-controlled epidural analgesia during labor.
This study compared the safety, efficacy, local anesthetic usage, patient satisfaction, and anesthesia manpower demands of patient-controlled epidural analgesia and continuous epidural infusion during labor. After establishment of epidural analgesia, 88 parturients with vertex presentation were assigned randomly to receive either patient-controlled epidural analgesia or continuous epidural infusion, using 0.125% bupivacaine containing 1 microgram/mL of fentanyl. Inadequate analgesia was treated in both groups with a 10-mL "top-up" of 0.25% bupivacaine. ⋯ Use of local anesthetic solution was examined with respect to cervical dilatation and did not increase late in labor. Patients generally viewed infusion technology favorably. These findings suggest that patient-controlled epidural analgesia is safe and effective, reduces anesthesia manpower needs, and is well accepted.
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Obstetrics and gynecology · Feb 1991
The effect of lateral tilt on maternal and fetal hemodynamic variables.
We measured maternal blood pressure and heart rate, fetal heart rate, and umbilical artery velocity waveforms in 25 healthy women placed in the supine and in both right and left 5 degrees and 10 degrees lateral tilt positions. Although we found no significant difference among these variables in the various maternal positions, two of 25 women became hypotensive and symptomatic in the supine and 5 degrees tilt positions. Because we could not predict which women would become symptomatic, we recommend lateral tilt of all pregnant women during operative procedures beyond 20 weeks' gestation, including those in the lithotomy position for vaginal delivery.
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Obstetrics and gynecology · Dec 1990
Does indomethacin alter the hemodynamic response to magnesium sulfate infusion and hemorrhage in gravid ewes?
The purpose of this study was to determine whether indomethacin alters the maternal and fetal hemodynamic response to magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) infusion and hemorrhage in gravid ewes. We studied seven chronically instrumented animals between 0.8 and 0.9 of timed gestation. The experimental sequence included: 1) at time 0, indomethacin, 2 mg/kg, or vehicle only intravenously (IV) over 5 minutes; 2) at 60 minutes, MgSO4 4 g IV over 5 minutes; 3) at 65 minutes, MgSO4 infusion at 4 g/hour; 4) at 150 minutes, maternal hemorrhage, 20 mL/kg, over 60 minutes; and 5) at 215 minutes, reinfusion of maternal blood over 60 minutes. ⋯ For example, at the end of hemorrhage, maternal MAP was 36 +/- 7% below baseline (P = .0001) with indomethacin and 41 +/- 2% below baseline (P = .0001) in the vehicle-only group (P = not significant between groups). Hemorrhage significantly decreased fetal heart rate, pH, and PO2, and increased fetal MAP and PCO2 in both groups. We conclude that indomethacin did not alter the maternal or fetal hemodynamic response to MgSO4 infusion and hemorrhage in gravid ewes.