Revista española de anestesiología y reanimación
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Rev Esp Anestesiol Reanim · Jan 2013
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Comparative Study[Clinical and pharmacological study of the efficacy of carbetocin in elective caesareans compared to low and usual doses of oxytocin].
To evaluate uterine contractility, bleeding, haemodynamic performance, and side effects of different doses of oxytocin after delivery under spinal anaesthesia in caesarean section without prior labour in childbirth. We also perform a pharmacoeconomic evaluation. ⋯ With these results, we cannot recommend the routine use of carbetocin in caesarean sections, because it is accompanied by an increased incidence of side effects without any improvement in the prevention of obstetric haemorrhage. Finally, it is economically more expensive than the use of low doses of oxytocin, which may be the trend that should be considered in the future, due to the clinical outcomes, and its lower cost.
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Rev Esp Anestesiol Reanim · Jan 2013
[Impact on the implementation of patient controlled epidural analgesia for pain management during labor. A survey in a university hospital in Chile].
Analgesia for labor is a legal obligation in Chile. In our institution we implemented patient controlled analgesia for pain relief during labor. We describe the perception of the several professionals involved in the medical care of patients in labor in terms of effectiveness, usefulness, satisfaction, and safety. ⋯ Considering the study design limitations, absence of knowledge of economical impact, and the satisfaction level of patients under standard epidural analgesia, we recommend the patient controlled analgesia technique due to its good obstetric outcomes, general satisfaction and workload decrease.
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Rev Esp Anestesiol Reanim · Jan 2013
Review[Do anesthetic techniques influence postoperative outcomes? Part I].
The influence of anesthetic technique on postoperative outcomes has opened a wide field of research in recent years. High-risk patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery are those who have higher incidence of postoperative complications and mortality. A proper definition of this group of patients should focus maximal efforts and resources to improve the results. ⋯ We review some of the major controversies arising in the literature about the impact of anesthetic techniques on postoperative outcomes. We have grouped the impact of these techniques into 9 major investigation areas: mortality, cardiovascular complications, respiratory complications, postoperative cognitive dysfunction, chronic postoperative pain, cancer recurrence, postoperative nausea/vomiting, surgical outcomes and resources utilization. In this first part of the review, we discuss the basis on postoperative outcomes research, mortality, cardiovascular and respiratory complications.
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Rev Esp Anestesiol Reanim · Jan 2013
Case Reports[Intrauterine myelomeningocele repair: experience of the fetal medicine and therapy program of the Virgen de Rocío University Hospital].
The most frequent form of spina bifida is myelomeningocele. There is no optimal postnatal treatment for this defect. In addition to the motor or sensory deficits, which depend on the location of the lesion, the defect is usually associated with Chiari ii malformation in affected children. ⋯ Anesthetic treatment should focus on both the mother and fetus and the hemodynamic factors regulating placental flow, uterine dynamics, blood loss and fetal well-being must remain well-controlled. Within our Program for Fetal Medicine and Therapy, 21 open fetal interventions have been performed: 17 EXIT procedures and 4 procedures for the intrauterine correction of fetal myelomeningocele. We describe our experience of the intrauterine repair of fetal myelomeningocele through open fetal surgery.