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5.
Am J Obstet Gynecol ; 168(3 Pt 1): 796-8, 1993 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8456882

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: In laboring women a consistent difference has become evident between measurements obtained with an automated blood pressure device and those obtained with the auscultatory method. A prospective study was designed to assess the concordance of these two methods. STUDY DESIGN: Three sets of brachial blood pressure measurements were made by both oscillatory and auscultatory techniques in 30 women in labor, 20 term pregnant women not in labor, and 20 nonpregnant volunteers. RESULTS: In the nonlaboring women and the nonpregnant controls there was satisfactory agreement between the results of the two methods of measurement. In the parturients systolic pressures were consistently and significantly higher and diastolic pressures consistently and significantly lower with the oscillatory compared with the auscultatory method, but mean arterial pressures were not different. CONCLUSION: In laboring women there is a discrepancy between systolic and diastolic pressures obtained by the auscultatory versus the oscillatory method of measurement, although mean pressures are not significantly different. We suggest that during labor the diagnoses of hypertension and hypotension be based on the mean rather than the systolic or diastolic pressure.


Subject(s)
Blood Pressure Determination/standards , Labor, Obstetric/physiology , Auscultation , Automation , Blood Pressure Determination/methods , Female , Humans , Oscillometry , Pregnancy
6.
J Anesth ; 6(3): 255-61, 1992 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15278534

ABSTRACT

The effect of blood glucose concentration on bupivacaine-induced cardiotoxicity was investigated in normoglycemic and hypoglycemic adult rats and compared to that of equipotent doses of lidocaine. The anesthetic agents were injected intraperitoneally into tracheostomized animals anesthetized with ketamine. ECG and direct blood pressure measurements were recorded continuously. Femoral arterial blood was used for determinations of glucose level, potassium concentration and base deficit values. Blood was drawn from the heart at the time of death for local anesthetic levels. In hypoglycemic animals, bupivacaine rapidly produced serious dysrhythmias leading to asystole. In normoglycemic rats, only ST-segment changes followed bupivacaine injection and death ensued from hypoxemia secondary to respiratory failure. With lidocaine, both hypoglycemic and normoglycemic rats died of hypoxemia following respiratory paralysis without antecedent dysrhythmias. Thus, hypoglycemia enhanced the cardiac effects of bupivacaine but not those of lidocaine.

10.
Obstet Gynecol ; 74(3 Pt 2): 452-3, 1989 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2761929

ABSTRACT

In a gravida with a triplet gestation complicated by fainting attacks and transient episodes of apparently positional hypotension, cardiac output was measured noninvasively to determine the optimal posture during cesarean section. Before delivery, cardiac output and mean arterial pressure were highest in the left semilateral position and lowest in the right semilateral posture. Shortly after delivery of the infants, cardiac output was still highest in the left semilateral position but lowest in the supine posture. Twenty-four and 48 hours later, the values were almost identical in all three positions. Noninvasive cardiac output monitoring provided a simple method of detecting the occurrence and severity of caval compression and of determining the optimal position of the gravida during cesarean section.


Subject(s)
Cardiac Output , Hypotension, Orthostatic/physiopathology , Pregnancy Complications, Cardiovascular/physiopathology , Pregnancy, Multiple , Adult , Cesarean Section , Female , Humans , Monitoring, Physiologic , Posture , Pregnancy , Triplets , Vena Cava, Inferior/physiology
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