Heliyon (May 2024)

Left-lateral position versus phenylephrine prophylactic treatment for hypotension following combined spinal epidural anesthesia during elective cesarean section

  • Songyuan Liu,
  • Shuzhi Luo,
  • Runzhi Jiang,
  • Shili Su,
  • Mingqiang Zhao

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 9
p. e30019

Abstract

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Backgroud: Hypotension is one of the most common and dangerous complications following combined spinal epidural anesthesia during elective cesarean delivery. Many methods are used to prevent or treat the hypotension with pharmacological or non-pharmacological measures. Our aim was to assess left-lateral position and phenylephrine prophylactic treatment for the prevention or treatment of maternal hypotension. Methods: A total of 127 pregnant women were enrolled to be analyzed. The primary outcome measure was the incidence of maternal hypotension and secondary outcome measures included maternal demographic characteristics, anesthesia-to-incision time interval, birthweight and Apgar scores. Results: The incidence of hypotension was 65.4 % in sequential reactive treatment and only 11.3 % achieved complete anesis after left-lateral position, significantly higher than 17.4 % in left-lateral position combined phenylephrine prophylactic treatment (P 0.05). The univariate logistic regression analysis revealed a significant association between treatment and hypotension (OR 0.11, 95 % CI 0.05–0.27). After adjusting for confounding variables, the risk of hypotension was decreased in subjects with treatment (OR 0.1, 95 % CI 0.04–0.25; OR 0.15, 95 % CI 0.05–0.43; OR 0.16, 95 % CI 0.05–0.46). The results of stratified and interaction analyses of the association between treatment revealed no interactive role from maternal age, gravidity and BMI before cesarean section (P > 0.05). Conclusions: Single use of left-lateral position had limited effective and left-lateral position combined prophylactic phenylephrine used may be much better to prevent or treat hypetension, but larger studies with more robust data are needed to confirm these findings.

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