International journal of obstetric anesthesia
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Int J Obstet Anesth · Oct 1998
Operative obstetric mortality at Harare Central Hospital 1992-1994: an anaesthetic view.
A prospective review of anaesthetic-associated deaths (AAD) was undertaken at the maternity unit of Harare Central Hospital, Zimbabwe, for the triennium 1992-1994. AAD was defined as death within 24 h of anaesthesia or failure to regain consciousness. Three groups of avoidable factors (obstetric, anaesthetic and administrative) were considered, and a scoring system used to allocate one avoidability point for each death with avoidable factors. ⋯ The problems are discussed and also viewed in the context of overall maternal mortality (outcome period 42 days). The mortality data are compared with those from the UK and some hospitals in South Africa. It is concluded that improvements in resources, education, guidelines and monitoring are necessary if the mortality rate is to be reduced.
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Int J Obstet Anesth · Oct 1998
Incidence of epidural catheter replacement in parturients: a retrospective chart review.
We noted in our practice of obstetric anesthesia at a large teaching hospital that the epidural catheter failure rate was higher than previously reported. We undertook this study to determine the incidence of epidural catheter failure in parturients and to determine the primary causes of failure. After institutional approval, we evaluated the charts of parturients who received epidural analgesia for labor or anesthesia for cesarean section for 6 randomly selected months spanning one year. ⋯ The major causes of catheter failure were no analgesia and unilateral block. The experience of the anesthesiologist, the mode of delivery, patient age, patient weight, type of epidural catheter, occurrence of paresthesia and the use of CSE were all associated with significantly different epidural catheter replacement rates. Despite the initially high failure rate, the overall patient satisfaction rate was greater than 98%.
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Int J Obstet Anesth · Oct 1998
Acute airway obstruction during spinal anaesthesia for caesarean section.
A 30-year-old primiparous Caucasian woman with known placenta praevia required an emergency caesarean section for a mild antepartum haemorrhage at the onset of spontaneous term labour. Following intravenous prehydration with 500 ml gelatin colloid (Haemaccel trade mark ), spinal anaesthesia was induced in the sitting position with 2.6 ml of 0.5% hyperbaric bupivacaine (13 mg). The patient was then placed in the recumbent position with left lateral tilt, whereupon she suddenly became dyspnoeic. ⋯ Since parturients have a higher incidence of difficult airway management than the general population, anaphylactoid reactions presenting as angioneurotic oedema pose a particular challenge for the anaesthetist. The lower incidence of allergy associated with hydroxyethyl starch (Hetastarch) may make it a more appropriate choice of colloid in this setting. However, the balance of evidence now suggests that vasopressors, particularly ephedrine, are superior to fluids for maintenance of blood pressure during regional anaesthesia for caesarean section.