International journal of obstetric anesthesia
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Int J Obstet Anesth · Oct 1995
Post partum magnetic resonance imaging: lumbar tissue changes are unrelated to epidural analgesia or mode of delivery.
Thirty five women consented post partum to daily lumbar back pain assessments and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) (0.15 Tesla) within 48 hours of delivery using a T(1) weighted spin echo and a fat suppression sequence (STIR) to identify tissue water. Nine women (26%) had lumbar disc abnormalities on MRI scan. ⋯ Eight women (23%) had mild, 15 (43%) moderate, and 12 (34%) severe changes with an average of 5 segments involved. These changes were reversible and related neither to the mode of delivery, nor to the trauma of epidural cannulation.
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In 1993 a postal survey of maternity hospitals within the UK was carried out to obtain data on the types of anaesthesia used for caesarean section. The poor response rate (79/226, 35%) reflects the paucity of data available in many centres. ⋯ Overall, during the 11-year period covered by the survey there was a significant reduction in the percentage use of general anaesthesia (77% in 1982 declining to 44% in 1992), but because of a 51% increase in the caesarean section rate the real reduction in the actual number of general anaesthetics used was modest (13%). If this holds true nationally, then factors other than a simple change from general anaesthesia to regional anaesthesia must contribute to the reduced maternal mortality from anaesthetic causes.