View clinical trials related to Cesarean Section Complications.
Filter by:This study compared the effects of prophylactic infusion of metaraminol, phenylephrine and norepinephrine adjusted according to body weight on fetal acid-base balance and maternal hemodynamics.
This is a single center prospective self-control study to validate the effectiveness of left uterine displacement after subarachnoid block (SAB) with simultaneous measurements of blood pressure (BP) on the arm and left ankle during surgery in patients undergoing cesarean delivery (CD) at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center
This study seeks to identify whether the addition of liposomal bupivacaine to regular bupivacaine and saline administered via surgical transversus abdominis plane (TAP) block will reduce the cumulative opioid dose in the first 48 hours after cesarean. 60 women scheduled for cesarean at Unity-Point Health Meriter Hospital in Madison, Wisconsin will be enrolled and can be expect to be on study for up to 6 weeks post-partum.
This study aimed to compare bilateral ultrasound-guided TAP block with single-shot local anesthetic wound infiltration for analgesia after cesarean delivery performed under spinal anesthesia
The Adult Attachment Style (AAS) is a questionnaire designed to measure how an adult generally feels in their close personal relationships. The questionnaire has two main axes of measurements - avoidance and anxiety, that gives rise to four different categories of attachment styles. Women's attachment styles have been shown to be correlated to pain during labour, but not after. No study has analyzed whether attachment styles are correlated to the pain after cesarean section. This study will assess correlation between the AAS score, and pain after elective cesarean section. Additionally, this study aims to clarify the correlation between attachment scale and overall quality of recovery after cesarean section as defined by a recently validated tool, the ObsQoR10.
The study compares the microbiome differences in the endometrium between normal people and patients with uterine diverticula after cesarean section and aims to discover the essential microbes and their metabolites that highly associate with the repair of myometrium through metagenomics and metabolomics. It verifies that flora disorder in the endometrium is the important cause of poor uterine repair after cesarean section. Then these patients with uterine diverticula receive the transvaginal repair surgery. Through the follow-up with them, we gain the microbiome differences of the endometrium before and after the surgery and show the validity of transvaginal repair surgery in the level of microbiome and metabolism.
Postpartum haemorrhage is the common cause of maternal death worldwide. The primary purpose of this study is to identify the maternal outcomes after PPH. The highlighted outcome is the anesthetic management including rate of blood transfusion and incidence of patient experiencing massive blood transfusion. The secondary purposes of this study are amount of blood loss, causes of PPH and other outcomes that related to PPH such as the rate of hysterectomy and postoperative outcome eg. congestive heart failure, acute kidney injury and TRALI etc. Additionally, incidence of PPH will be studied. Data collection will be made to identify the cause of PPH, anesthetic techniques that may related to the amount of hemorrhage, medical treatment for PPH and neonatal outcomes. We also aim to obtain the rate of ICU admission and revealed the factors involving the ICU admission in PPH patients underwent cesarean delivery.
Late sequelae of a cesarean section related to a uterine scar defects include gynecological symptoms and obstetric complications. The aim of this study was to evaluate the incidence and characteristics of cesarean scar defects after uterine closure by double-layer barbed suture.
The main objective of this study is to determine if the use of transnasal humidified rapid-insufflation ventilatory exchange (THRIVE) can reduce by 90 seconds the time between the entry into the operating room of the volunteer and the moment when the anaesthetic drugs are ready and when the Oxygen Reserve Index has reached a plateau value for more than 10 seconds, a moment which would therefore allow the induction of general anaesthesia, compared to the pre-oxygenation with the face mask applied by the anaesthetist alone in charge of anaesthesia.
Executive summary: Cesarean delivery, or section (CS), is the single most common surgical procedure performed. Estimates indicate that in low resource settings, CS comprises up to 50% of more of the total volume of operations performed. The World Health Organization recommends national CS rates of between 10-15% to save lives and improve maternal and neonatal outcomes. Population-based work indicates that CS rates of up to 19% are demonstrably related to improved maternal and neonatal survival. However, complications are common, and gynecological and obstetric surgical interventions are associated with high rates of morbidity. In low resource settings, complication rates are particularly high. The intervention being tested is based on a previously developed program called Clean Cut. Clean Cut is an adaptive, multimodal surgical infection prevention program that integrates perioperative process improvement and patient outcomes measurement using process mapping, training and improved management practices, and compliance with critical standards of surgical antisepsis. It was successfully piloted in five surgical departments in Ethiopia, and reduced the relative risk of infection by 35%. This has been adapted specifically for obstetric and gynecological operations and will be evaluated in a cluster randomized stepped wedge trial design in ten maternity hospitals/departments in Ethiopia in order to reduce infections and other complications for women undergoing cesarean delivery and other obstetric and gynecologic operations.