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Clinical Trial Summary

The investigators used a retrospective review of 251 SARS-CoV-2 (severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2) positive patients' cesarean section anesthesia to determine the rate of failed spinal anesthesia, management techniques for failed block, and risk factors that contribute to failure in this study.


Clinical Trial Description

All anesthesiologists face a challenge when it comes to the anesthesia of patients with coronavirus disease who are going to have a cesarian section. Patients' and healthcare personnel' safety should be prioritized. Non-emergent procedures in patients with respiratory infections, such as COVID-19 (Coronavirus disease 2019), should be postponed and rescheduled once the infection has been treated. However, some emergency treatments, such as cesarian section, cannot be postponed. So, for COVID 19 patients, which method should be used? According to past studies, the risk of maternal death is 16,7 times higher with general anesthesia than with regional anesthesia (1). Furthermore, general anesthesia, which requires aerosol-generating procedures such as ventilating and intubating patients, has a higher risk of respiratory problems during or after surgery than regional anesthesia. Earlier data on pregnant patients during the COVID 19 pandemic showed no difference in COVID 19-related mortality between pregnant and non-pregnant patients, but a recent study found that pregnancy is associated with a 70% greater risk of death. Another important point is that, when compared to those who are not exposed to tracheal intubation, the transfer of acute respiratory infection to a health care professional during tracheal intubation is 6.6 times higher. For such reasons, the European and American Societies of Regional Anesthesia jointly issued COVID 19 recommendations stating that regional anesthesia should be preferred over general anesthesia whenever possible, and practice recommendations for regional anesthesia during the pandemic have already been published. In addition, the American Society of Anesthesiologists and the Society for Obstetric Anesthesiology and Perinatology advise doctors to "consider using neuraxial methods rather than general anesthesia for most cesarian deliveries." In many facilities, single-shot spinal anesthesia is the preferred method for cesarian section. It delivers great anesthesia because of its ease of use, rapid onset of sensory and motor blockage, reliability, ease of mastering, and capacity to provide optimal surgical circumstances; it also minimizes the hazards of general anesthetic while enhancing partition satisfaction. In addition, when compared to general anesthesia, the risk of complications such intraoperative bleeding, surgical site infection, and postoperative pain is lower with spinal anesthesia. In 1899, August Bier proclaimed spinal anesthesia to be a failure, stating, "Experienced professional, correct technique, single puncture, adequate CSF backflow, effective anesthetic agent!" So, why did it fail? -Capriciousness!!" Single shot spinal anesthesia failure may occur when the subarachnoid space is not reached, or analgesia is not sufficient for surgery after injection. The issue is that if anesthesia fails during COVID 19 procedures, we'll need to develop a new approach for supplementing anesthesia and analgesia cautiously, quickly, and meticulously. Failed spinal anesthesia can be partial or complete. If anesthesia and analgesia are not achieved within ten minutes after successful intrathecal injection, the bupivacaine spinal anesthetic is regarded to have failed. Partial failure was defined as insufficient extent, quality, or duration of pharmacological action for that procedure, while complete failure was described as no sensory or motor blockage. Failure of spinal anesthesia necessitates extreme caution, judgment, and technique. If surgery has not yet begun, a partial or total failure can be managed by increasing the Trendelenburg position or administering a second spinal anesthetic. However, if the surgery has already begun, it can be managed by changing positions, injecting local anaesthetic in the operation area by the surgeon, administering sedation with oxygen, opioids, benzodiazepines, or ketamine, and then converting the anesthesia to general anesthesia. The failure rate of spinal anesthesia is widely distributed, according to researches, ranging from 1 to 17 percent. During spinal anesthesia, the Royal College of Anesthetics proposes a failure rate of 3% in emergencies and 1% for elective procedures. The goal of this study was to determine failure rate and solutions for spinal anesthesia in the context of a COVID 19 pandemic. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05067985
Study type Observational
Source Ankara City Hospital Bilkent
Contact
Status Completed
Phase
Start date April 1, 2020
Completion date March 12, 2021

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