View clinical trials related to Spinal Anaesthesia.
Filter by:The aim of this study is to investigate the importance of pulse wave velocity, an indicator of arterial stiffness, in predicting hemodynamic changes in normotensive and hypertensive patients undergoing spinal anesthesia.
The aim of this study was to examine the effect of keeping the patient in a sitting position for 1 minute after spinal anaesthesia in elective caesarean operations, primarily on the formation of hypotension and secondarily on nausea-vomiting, the need for ephedrine and the block characteristics.
Spinal anesthesia is commonly accompanied by hypotension due to vasodilation that follows sympathetic blockade and decreased systemic vascular resistance. Prevention of hypotension is usually achieved through administration of fluids and vasopressors .There is an ongoing debate concerning both the proper fluid timing, pre-load against co-load and fluid type crystalloids against colloids .This study aims at comparing the effectiveness of co-loading of crystalloids versus colloids versus hypertonic saline 3% in preventing hypotension induced by spinal anesthesia.
A randomised controlled trial comparing the use of pre-procedural ultrasound scanning with manual palpation to identify landmarks for performance of spinal anaesthesia.