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Original article| Volume 5, ISSUE 1, P3-7, January 1996

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Advance prediction of hypotension at cesarean delivery under spinal anesthesia

  • S.M. Kinsella
    Correspondence
    Correspondence to: Dr S. Michael Kinsella, Sir Humphry Davy Department of Anaesthesia, St Michael's Hospital, Southwell Street, Bristol BS2 8EG, UK.
    Footnotes
    Affiliations
    Sir Humphry Davy Department of Anaesthesia, St Michael's Hospital, Bristol, UK

    Department of Anesthesiology, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, USA
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  • M.C. Norris
    Footnotes
    Affiliations
    Sir Humphry Davy Department of Anaesthesia, St Michael's Hospital, Bristol, UK

    Department of Anesthesiology, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, USA
    Search for articles by this author
  • Author Footnotes
    1 S. M. Kinsella, Sir Humphry Davy Department of Anaesthesia, St Michael's Hospital, Bristol, UK
    2 H. C. Norris, Department of Anesthesiology, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, USA.
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      Abstract

      Cardiovascular responses to supine inferior vena cava compression might predict hypotension risk during elective cesarean delivery using spinal anesthesia. In this pilot study we investigated 27 women before operation by taking blood pressure and heart rate measurements for 5 min in the left lateral position, 5 min supine, and then performed one further reading in the left lateral position and one sitting. Anesthesia with hyperbaric bupivacaine was rigorously standardised. A pre-operative ‘supine stress test’, combining an increase in maternal heart rate of greater than 10 beats/min or leg flexion movements while supine, was analysed. A positive supine stress test (SST) was 4.1 times more frequent in those with severe systolic hypotension below 70% of baseline (12 out of 16 women) than in those without (2 out of 11 women), with a sensitivity of 75% (95% C.I. 48% to 93%) and specificity of 82% (95% C.I. 48% to 98%). A positive test was associated with twice as much vasopressor use as a negative test (Math Eq mg versus Math Eq mg; P = 0.0014). Unlike the SST, cardiovascular responses to the change from recumbent to sitting (tilt test) were not useful as a predictor of hypotension.
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