Spinal anesthesia for elective cesarean section is associated with shorter hospital stay compared to general anesthesia

被引:20
作者
Havas, Fadil [1 ]
Sungur, Mukadder Orhan [1 ]
Yenigun, Yilmaz [1 ]
Karadeniz, Meltem [1 ]
Kilic, Miray [1 ]
Seyhan, Tulay Ozkan [1 ]
机构
[1] Istanbul Univ, Istanbul Fac Med, Dept Anesthesiol, Istanbul, Turkey
来源
AGRI-THE JOURNAL OF THE TURKISH SOCIETY OF ALGOLOGY | 2013年 / 25卷 / 02期
关键词
Cesarean section; gastrointestinal motility; general anesthesia; hospital stay; spinal anesthesia;
D O I
10.5505/agri.2013.42204
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Objectives: This prospective study aims to compare maternal and neonatal effects of spinal and general anesthesia for elective cesarean section. Methods: Term parturients receiving routine spinal (Group SA, n= 95) or general (Group GA, n= 93) anesthesia and standard postoperative analgesia for elective cesarean section were included in this study. Operation time, incision-hysterotomy (T (S-H)) and hysterotomy-umbilical cord clamping (T (H-U)) intervals, oxytocine requirement, intraoperative fluids, ephedrine requirement, incidence of hypotension, time to first analgesic requirement (T (analg)), pethidine consumption, adverse events, time to first breastfeeding, oral food intake (T (OI)), flatulence (T (F)), defecation (T (D)), mobilization, and postoperative hospital stay were compared between the groups. Newborn Apgar scores, umbilical venous blood gas analysis, incidence of hypoglycemia, nutritional support, phototherapy and ventilatory support were also analyzed. Results: Spinal anesthesia was associated with longer T (S-H) and T (H-U) durations, lower oxytocine requirements, higher incidence of hypotension, increased ephedrine and fluid consumption, and delayed T analg. Furthermore, T (OI), T (F), T (D) and postoperative hospital stay was shorter in patients given spinal anesthesia when compared with patients given general anesthesia (48h vs. 52 h, respectively; p< 0.01). No difference in postoperative analgesic consumption and neonatal outcomes, except 1st min Apgar scores and umbilical blood gas analysis, was detected. Conclusion: Spinal anesthesia, when compared to general anesthesia shortens postoperative hospital stay with early return of gastrointestinal functions in elective cesarean section.
引用
收藏
页码:55 / 63
页数:9
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