Epidural Anesthesia for Cesarean Section
- 1 January 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Anesthesiology
- Vol. 52 (1) , 48-51
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00000542-198001000-00010
Abstract
Three groups of patients undergoing elective cesarean section during lumbar epidural anesthesia with bupivacaine, 0.75% (15 patients), chloroprocaine, 3% (15 patients) or etidocaine, 1% (10 patients) were studied. Excellent sensory and motor block were obtained with chloroprocaine and bupivacaine; sensory anesthesia was inadequate with etidocaine in most patients. Onset of anesthesia, induction-delivery interval and stay in the recovery room were all longer with bupivacaine when compared with chloroprocaine. Fetal outcome, as determined by Apgar scores, acid-base status and neurobehavioral testing, was equally good in all groups. At delivery, fetal/maternal concentration ratio of bupivacaine was 0.31 and that of etidocaine, 0.25. The umbilical artery-umbilical vein blood concentration difference for etidocaine was significantly higher than that for bupivacaine. Excellent clinical results were obtained using bupivacaine, 0.75% alone, or chloroprocaine, 3%, for induction and maintenance of anesthesia, supplemented with bupivacaine, 0.25%, before removal of the catheter.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of Maternal Position on Epidural Anesthesia for Cesarean Section, Acid—Base Status, and Bupivacaine Concentrations at DeliveryAnesthesiology, 1979
- Epidural Anesthesia with Bupivacaine for Cesarean SectionAnesthesiology, 1978
- The Fetal and Neonatal Effects of Regional Anesthesia in ObstetricsAnesthesiology, 1978
- Maternal and neonatal effects of methoxyflurane, nitrous oxide and lumbar epidural anaesthesia for caesarean sectionCanadian Journal of Anesthesia/Journal canadien d'anesthésie, 1977
- ETIDOCAINE FOR CAESAREAN SECTION—EFFECTS ON MOTHER AND BABYBritish Journal of Anaesthesia, 1977
- Blood Acid-Base Alignment Nomogram: Scales for pH, pCO2, Base Excess of Whole Blood of Different Hemoglobin Concentrations, Plasma Bicarbonate, and Plasma Total-CO2Scandinavian Journal of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation, 1963