Spinal Anaesthesia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effect of Diabetes Mellitus on Spinal Block Criteria During Cesarean Section
The current study aimed at studying the effect of DM during pregnancy on the spinal block
criteria during C.S.
The primary end point of the trial is the incidence of complete failure of spinal block.
Secondary endpoint is to determine the effect of DM on the other spinal block criteria as
onset and duration of block, level of spinal block, rate of regression, hemodynamic changes,
doses of inotropes and incidence of complications
Regional anaesthetic techniques are now the most frequently used type of anaesthetic used for
caesarean deliveries. They have a better safety profile than general anaesthesia in the
pregnant woman. The choice of whether to use a spinal, epidural or combined spinal-epidural
technique will depend on patient and surgical factors.
Although spinal (subarachnoid or intrathecal) anaesthesia is generally regarded as one of the
most reliable types of regional block methods, the possibility of failure has long been
recognized.
Most experienced practitioners would consider the incidence of failure with spinal
anaesthesia to be extremely low, perhaps less than 1%. However, a figure as high as 17% has
been quoted from an American teaching hospital, yet most of the failures were judged to be
'avoidable Spinal anaesthesia (SA) is a frequently used anaesthetic technique, and success
rates and patient satisfaction are generally high. However, there are numerous reports of
failed SA (FSA), and published failure rates in large series of SA range from 0.46% to 17%.
The reasons most commonly provided to explain failure are technical problems, errors of
judgement with respect to pharmacological factors, such as inadequate dose of local
anaesthetic (LA), and inadequate positioning of the patient. . Proposed mechanisms for
inadequate block despite correct dosing and injection technique are maldistribution ,
variability in the anatomy of the lumbar subarachnoid space, inadvertent subdural or epidural
injection, and resistance to the effects of LA.
Successful spinal anaesthesia requires the deposition of the correct dose of the correct drug
in the CSF that is in free continuity with the spinal cord and cauda equina, and that there
are no barriers, either physiological, biochemical or mechanical, to prevent the normal
anticipated action of the drug in the spinal cord. Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) refers
to any degree of glucose intolerance with onset or first recognition during pregnancy. It
occurs in 2-9% of all pregnancies and accounts for 90% of cases of diabetes mellitus
complicating pregnancy. A1C is routinely measured approximately every 3 months in individuals
with diabetes to assess the mean glucose concentration. The erythrocyte life span is ∼120
days. Thus, the 3-month interval between tests of A1C reflects the mean blood glucose over
the preceding weeks to months. Hence, the rate of change of A1C in pregnancy reflects the
glycemic control over the past few weeks Hoppe et al. declared diabetes mellitus (DM)as a
possible cause of SA failure in a case series consisting four obstetric patients.
two possible factors may be important for quality and level of SA inpatients with DM. First
is neuropathy and second is possible changes in composition of CSF such as density or volume
secondary to hyperglicemia in blood and CSF .So the investigators hypothesized that DM could
affect the success of SA
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