Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02732197

Effects of Sedation on Spinal Anesthesia-induced Maternal Hypotension

Effects of Sedation on Spinal Anesthesia-induced Maternal Hypotension in Preoperatively Anxious Parturients Undergoing Urgent Category-1 Cesarean Section: A Historical Cohort Study

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
102 (actual)
Sponsor
Van Training and Research Hospital · Other Government
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years – 35 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Background: This study was designed to investigate the effect of sedation on the occurrence of maternal hypotension in preoperatively anxious parturients undergoing urgent category-1 Cesarean section (C/S) under spinal anesthesia. Methods: After institutional ethics committee approval, prospectively collected data of 1824 parturients undergoing C/S were reviewed. Parturients with high preoperative anxiety scores (visual analogue scale for anxiety (VAS-A)≥70) undergoing C/S under spinal anesthesia with thiopental (Group S=49) and without any other type of sedation (Group NS=53) were included in the analysis. Hemodynamic parameters were documented and maximum systolic arterial pressure (SAP) reductions from the baseline after spinal anesthesia were calculated. Incidences of hypotension (SAP≥30% decrease from baseline or \<100 mmHg) and bradycardia (HR\<55 beats/min), and related-ephedrine and -atropine requirements were noted. Our primary endpoint was to compare the maximum SAP reductions from the baseline values in Groups S and NS. Secondary endpoints were incidences of hypotension and bradycardia, required ephedrine and atropine doses, newborn Apgar scores at 1st and 5th min.

Detailed description

Background: This study was designed to investigate the effect of thiopental sodium sedation on the occurrence of maternal hypotension in preoperatively anxious parturients undergoing urgent category-1 Cesarean section (C/S) under spinal anesthesia. Methods: After institutional ethics committee approval, prospectively collected data of 1824 parturients undergoing C/S at Van Training and Research Hospital between August 2014 and February 2015 were reviewed. Parturients with high preoperative anxiety scores (visual analogue scale for anxiety (VAS-A)≥70) undergoing C/S under spinal anesthesia with thiopental (Group S=49) and without any other type of sedation (Group NS=53) were included in the analysis. All parturients received SA with hyperbaric bupivacaine 0.5% 2.5 mL. Hemodynamic parameters were documented and maximum systolic arterial pressure (SAP) reductions from the baseline after spinal anesthesia were calculated. Incidences of hypotension (SAP≥30% decrease from baseline or \<100 mmHg) and bradycardia (HR\<55 beats/min), and related-ephedrine and -atropine requirements were noted. All data were obtained from the surgical database and patient charts. Primary endpoint of our study was to compare the maximum SAP reductions from the baseline values in Groups S and NS. Secondary endpoints were incidences of hypotension and bradycardia, required ephedrine and atropine doses, newborn Apgar scores at 1st and 5th min.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGSedationParturients who received IV thiopental 2 mg kg-1 and if necessary additional 50 mg immediately after spinal anesthesia until reaching at least Ramsay sedation score of 3 (1: patient anxious, agitated or restless, 6: patient with no response to light glabella tap or loud auditory stimulus.).
DRUGNo sedationParturients did not receive any type of sedation after spinal anesthesia.

Timeline

Start date
2014-08-01
Primary completion
2015-02-01
Completion
2015-02-01
First posted
2016-04-08
Last updated
2016-04-11

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Turkey (Türkiye)

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02732197. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.