Articles: general-anesthesia.
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In this article, we have presented an overview of obstetric analgesia and anesthesia. If one central theme could be developed, it shoud be that analgesia either for labor and delivery or cesarean section must be chosen and performed with absolute exactness and safety. There is no margin for error. ⋯ Such service must provide contiguous around-the-clock coverage for tertiary hospital centers. On the one hand, most anesthesiologists are not well suited to many of the special demands of the obstetric suite, and, on the other hand, many obstetricians lack the full understanding and capabilities that the anesthesiologists possess. One solution for this dilemma might be to encourage obstetric colleagues to seek anesthesia training in order to organize obstetric anesthesia coverage.
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Southern medical journal · May 1978
Comparative StudyContinuous monitoring of skin temperature using a liquid-crystal thermometer during anesthesia.
Forehead skin temperature measured by a stip of liquid-crystal material was compared to esophageal, rectal, and axillary temperatures measured by thermistor probes in patients having general anesthesia for coronary artery bypass grafting. Before extracorporeal circulation, forehead skin temperature was lower than axillary, rectal, and esophageal temperatures by approximately 2.2 C (4.0 F). ⋯ The liquid-crystal strip may be useful as a safe, convenient method for routine monitoring of temperature trends during general anesthesia in patients whose exact core temperature need not be continuously monitored. We believe that infants, patients undergoing extracorporeal circulation, major abdominal, vascular, or neurosurgical procedures, or patients with a history of temperature regulatory problem are probably best monitored by a method which more exactly reflects core temperature.