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OBSTETRIC ANESTHESIA

Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1978
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.
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Anesthesia for Obstetrics

New England Journal of Medicine, 1964
ANESTHESIA for obstetrics is well over a century old, but a review of methods used reveals few innovations in the past fifty years.
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Pharmacogenetics in obstetric anesthesia

Current Opinion in Anaesthesiology, 2010
Genomic research in pain, anesthesia and analgesia generated some hope that pharmacogenetics may guide anesthesiologists to provide effective medicine in a 'tailored' manner. Within the field of obstetric anesthesia, relatively few studies have evaluated the effect of polymorphisms on the perception of labor or postcesarean pain or the response to ...
Ruth, Landau, John C, Kraft
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OBSTETRIC ANALGESIA AND ANESTHESIA

Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice, 1993
A number of analgesic and anesthetic options are available for patients during the intrapartum period. Appropriate attention in the prenatal period to patient education regarding these options is imperative. If pharmacologic anesthesia is required, risks and benefits both to the mother and neonate must be considered.
S A, Fields, E M, Wall
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Controversies in obstetric anesthesia

Journal of Anesthesia, 2012
Obstetric anesthesia has become a widely evidence-based practice, with an increasing number of specialized anesthesiologists and a permanent research production. We believe that with the review of commonly discussed and controversial points the reader will be able to incorporate an evidence-based practice into their routine and offer to parturients and
Guilherme, Holck, William, Camann
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Anesthesia for Obstetric Disasters

Advances in Anesthesia, 2020
Over the past 30 years, maternal mortality has increased in the United States to 18 deaths per 100,000 live births. Obstetric emergencies, including hemorrhage, hypertensive disorders in pregnancy, HELLP syndrome, and amniotic fluid embolism, and anesthesia complications, including high neuraxial blockade, local anesthetic systemic toxicity, and the ...
Kristen L, Fardelmann, Aymen Awad, Alian
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An Update on Obstetric Anesthesia

Seminars in Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia, 2010
Many women in the United States receive analgesia for labor and delivery. The ideal labor analgesic technique would confer complete pain relief without side effects. The analgesic technique would not cause any lower extremity motor blockade nor interfere with the progress or course of labor and would be sufficiently flexible to produce anesthesia for ...
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Anesthesia in Obstetrics

Postgraduate Medicine, 1973
Although obstetric anesthesia should be tailored to the patient, regional anesthesia is usually safer for mother and child than general anesthesia. Each of the methods available—spinal, epidural, caudal, paracervical and pudendal—has its advantages and disadvantages. Epidural anesthesia is closest to the perfect method for obstetrics.
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Spinal anesthesia in obstetrics

The American Journal of Surgery, 1927
Abstract We believe that this work, though small, is sufficient to show that spinal anesthesia by the technic indicated and in the dosage employed, is safe for obstetric use. The single contraindication is hypotension. It is not fitted for first-stage analgesia by reason of its short duration.
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Obstetric Analgesia And Anesthesia

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1968
To the Editor:— Your subscribers should not be left supposing that the review of John J. Bonica's Principles and Practice of Obstetric Analgesia and Anesthesia ( 202 :249, 1967) represents, by any chance, the opinions of physicians actually giving obstetric anesthesia.
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