Articles: postoperative-complications.
-
Laparoscopic surgery may be associated with increased perioperative morbidity due to respiratory and cardiocirculatory problems. Preoperative assessment requires a diagnostic program including laboratory tests and noninvasive diagnostic studies, and a physical status classification. ⋯ Increased intraoperative morbidity is expected in patients with manifest cardiac failure or severely restricted pulmonary function. In patients with moderate pulmonary dysfunction laparoscopic procedures seem to be associated with the benefit of a better postoperative pulmonary function.
-
Review Case Reports
Extradural abscess complicating extradural anaesthesia for caesarean section.
Extradural abscess has been described infrequently as a complication of extradural anaesthesia and analgesia. We describe an abscess that developed 5 days after operation in a patient who had extradural anaesthesia for Caesarean section and postoperative analgesia, and review the literature on extradural abscess complicating extradural catheterization, including a discussion on pathogenesis, clinical presentation, diagnosis and management. There have now been 16 reported cases of extradural catheter-related extradural abscess. ⋯ One case was managed successfully without surgery. Fifty percent of all cases have been reported in the past 5 years. With the increasing use of extradural techniques for anaesthesia and analgesia, this serious complication may be seen more frequently in the future.