Der Anaesthesist
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Pregnancy causes substantial changes in the cardiovascular system: cardiac output (40%-50%) and blood volume (40%) increase whereas systemic peripheral resistance and arterial pressure decrease. The rise in progesterone and estrogen levels accompanying pregnancy stimulates the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system. Increased prostaglandin production follows renin activation; simultaneously, the arterial vessels show diminished angiotensin sensitivity. ⋯ An upregulation of angiotensin receptors enhances vascular reactivity, with the consequence of high peripheral resistance. For antihypertensive therapy hydralazine, alpha-methyldopa, and magnesium sulfate are the drugs of choice. A generalised recommendation of anaesthesia for the pre-eclamptic gravida cannot be made because both general and epidural anaesthesia have risks of severe side effects.
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The quality, result, and prognosis of neurosurgery relies heavily on the anaesthetic technique. Many different classes of drugs have been used during neurosurgical anaesthesia. This article reviews the use of intravenous (IV) propofol as an alternative to volatile anaesthetic techniques. ⋯ On the other hand, all IV agents except ketamine are associated with decreases in CMRO2 and are cerebral vasoconstrictors. For this reason, it is rational to use them for the induction and maintenance of anaesthesia for neurosurgery as part of a total IV anaesthetic technique. The third part of the article focuses on propofol as the newest representative of IV anaesthetics.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)