Weight gain during pregnancy does not influence the spread of spinal analgesia in the term parturient
(1997) In Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica 41(7). p.884-887- Abstract
- BACKGROUND: It is still controversial whether the spread of spinal anaesthesia in pregnancy is influenced by particular physique. Investigation was based on a clinical observation that parturients with a pronounced "pregnant" physique, e.g. generalised oedema and heavy abdomen, tended to develop more cephalad sensory blockades than parturients without these physical signs. Using weight gain during pregnancy as a measure for the physique at term, we aimed to determine whether this parameter influences the distribution of analgesia after subarachnoidal injection of plain bupivacaine. METHODS: Thirty women presenting for elective Caesarean section were studied. All the women received 13.5 mg plain bupivacaine via subarachnoid injection at the... (More)
- BACKGROUND: It is still controversial whether the spread of spinal anaesthesia in pregnancy is influenced by particular physique. Investigation was based on a clinical observation that parturients with a pronounced "pregnant" physique, e.g. generalised oedema and heavy abdomen, tended to develop more cephalad sensory blockades than parturients without these physical signs. Using weight gain during pregnancy as a measure for the physique at term, we aimed to determine whether this parameter influences the distribution of analgesia after subarachnoidal injection of plain bupivacaine. METHODS: Thirty women presenting for elective Caesarean section were studied. All the women received 13.5 mg plain bupivacaine via subarachnoid injection at the L2-3 interspace. Thirty minutes after the injection, while the women were in the supine position with a left lateral tilt on a horizontal operating table, the maximum cephalad extent of sensory analgesia (loss of sensation to sharpness of pinprick) was determined. RESULTS: Neither weight gain during pregnancy (6-22 kg, range), height (152-185 cm), weight (56-98 kg) nor body-mass index (20.2-31.8 kg/m2) correlated with the cephalad spread of sensory blockade. CONCLUSION: In parturients, weight gain during pregnancy, height, weight and body-mass index did not influence the extent of sensory analgesia after subarachnoidal administration of plain bupivacaine. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/1111777
- author
- Ekelof, N P ; Jensen, E ; Poulsen, J and Reinstrup, Peter LU
- publishing date
- 1997
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica
- volume
- 41
- issue
- 7
- pages
- 884 - 887
- publisher
- Wiley-Blackwell
- external identifiers
-
- pmid:9265932
- scopus:0030751815
- ISSN
- 0001-5172
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- no
- id
- ecd98617-5f76-4ff6-af05-9423fc248979 (old id 1111777)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 12:17:49
- date last changed
- 2022-02-11 05:04:15
@article{ecd98617-5f76-4ff6-af05-9423fc248979, abstract = {{BACKGROUND: It is still controversial whether the spread of spinal anaesthesia in pregnancy is influenced by particular physique. Investigation was based on a clinical observation that parturients with a pronounced "pregnant" physique, e.g. generalised oedema and heavy abdomen, tended to develop more cephalad sensory blockades than parturients without these physical signs. Using weight gain during pregnancy as a measure for the physique at term, we aimed to determine whether this parameter influences the distribution of analgesia after subarachnoidal injection of plain bupivacaine. METHODS: Thirty women presenting for elective Caesarean section were studied. All the women received 13.5 mg plain bupivacaine via subarachnoid injection at the L2-3 interspace. Thirty minutes after the injection, while the women were in the supine position with a left lateral tilt on a horizontal operating table, the maximum cephalad extent of sensory analgesia (loss of sensation to sharpness of pinprick) was determined. RESULTS: Neither weight gain during pregnancy (6-22 kg, range), height (152-185 cm), weight (56-98 kg) nor body-mass index (20.2-31.8 kg/m2) correlated with the cephalad spread of sensory blockade. CONCLUSION: In parturients, weight gain during pregnancy, height, weight and body-mass index did not influence the extent of sensory analgesia after subarachnoidal administration of plain bupivacaine.}}, author = {{Ekelof, N P and Jensen, E and Poulsen, J and Reinstrup, Peter}}, issn = {{0001-5172}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{7}}, pages = {{884--887}}, publisher = {{Wiley-Blackwell}}, series = {{Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica}}, title = {{Weight gain during pregnancy does not influence the spread of spinal analgesia in the term parturient}}, volume = {{41}}, year = {{1997}}, }