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Journal ArticleDOI

ED 90 of Intrathecal Chloroprocaine With Fentanyl for Prophylactic Cervical Cerclage: A Sequential Allocation Biased-Coin Design

TLDR
In this article , the effective dose of intrathecal chloroprocaine for 90% of patients undergoing prophylactic cervical cerclage placement was determined for a prospective 2-center double-blinded study.
Abstract
Chloroprocaine is a short-acting local anesthetic that has been used for spinal anesthesia in outpatient surgery. There is limited experience with spinal chloroprocaine for prophylactic cervical cerclage placement. We sought to determine the effective dose of intrathecal chloroprocaine for 90% of patients (ED90) undergoing prophylactic cervical cerclage placement. We hypothesized that the ED90 of intrathecal chloroprocaine when combined with 10-ug fentanyl would be between 33 and 54 mg.In this prospective 2-center double-blinded study, we enrolled women undergoing prophylactic cervical cerclage placement under combined spinal-epidural anesthesia. A predetermined dose of intrathecal 3% chloroprocaine with fentanyl 10 ug was administered. The initial dose was 45-mg intrathecal chloroprocaine. Subsequent dose adjustments were determined based on the response of the previous subject using an up-down sequential allocation with a biased-coin design. A dose was considered effective if at least a T12 block was achieved, and there was no requirement for epidural activation or intraoperative analgesic supplementation during the procedure. The primary outcome was the ED90 of intrathecal chloroprocaine with fentanyl 10 ug. Secondary outcomes included duration of surgery, anesthetic side effects, time to resolution of motor and sensory block, time to achieve recovery room discharge criteria, and patient satisfaction with anesthetic care. Isotonic regression was used to estimate the ED90.Forty-seven patients were enrolled into the study. Two patients were excluded (1 protocol violation and 1 failed block). In total, 45 patients completed the study. The estimated ED90 (95% confidence interval) for intrathecal chloroprocaine combined with fentanyl 10 ug was 49.5 mg (45.0-50.1 mg). The median (interquartile range [IQR]) duration of surgery was 15 (10-24) minutes. Resolution of the motor (Bromage 0) and sensory block took a median time of 60 (45-90) minutes and 90 (75-105) minutes, respectively. The median time to achieve recovery room discharge criteria was 150 (139-186) minutes. Satisfaction with anesthetic management was high in all patients. There were no reports of postdural puncture headache or transient neurological symptoms postoperatively.The ED90 of intrathecal chloroprocaine combined with fentanyl 10 ug was 49.5 mg. Intrathecal chloroprocaine was associated with rapid block recovery and high patient satisfaction, which makes it well suited for outpatient obstetric procedures.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Intrathecal 2-Chloroprocaine 3% Versus Hyperbaric Bupivacaine 0.75% for Cervical Cerclage: A Double-blind Randomized Controlled Trial

TL;DR: In this article , the authors compared 2-chloroprocaine 3% 50 mg and hyperbaric bupivacaine 0.75% 9 mg on dermatomal level, sensory block resolution, ability to ambulate and void, and motor blockade.
Journal ArticleDOI

Median effective dose of ropivacaine for prophylactic cervical cerclage in Chinese women: a dose-finding study

TL;DR: In this paper , the median effective dose of intrathecal ropivacaine for prophylactic cervical cerclage in 50% of patients (ED50) and the calculated dose required for successful block in 95% of participants (ED95) were determined.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Case Report of Spinal Anesthesia for Cerclage Placement in the Setting of Severe Hypertrophic Obstructive Cardiomyopathy

TL;DR: In this article , the case of a 31-year-old G2P0010 with HOCM with severe resting left ventricular outflow tract (LVOT) obstruction and systolic anterior motion of the mitral valve undergoing a cerclage under choroprocaine spinal anesthesia was presented.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Research electronic data capture (REDCap)-A metadata-driven methodology and workflow process for providing translational research informatics support

TL;DR: Research electronic data capture (REDCap) is a novel workflow methodology and software solution designed for rapid development and deployment of electronic data Capture tools to support clinical and translational research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transient Neurologic Symptoms after Spinal Anesthesia: An Epidemiologic Study of 1,863 Patients

TL;DR: Among other factors postulated to increase risk, obesity had an effect of borderline statistical significance, whereas age, sex, history of back pain, needle type, and lidocaine dose and concentration failed to affect risk.
Journal ArticleDOI

Advances in and limitations of up-and-down methodology: a précis of clinical use, study design, and dose estimation in anesthesia research.

TL;DR: The up-and-down method of Dixon and Mood is now commonly used in anesthesia research as mentioned in this paper, which allows the design of experiments for the measurement of the response at any point (quantile) along the dose-response curve, demonstrate the risk of certain statistical methods commonly used by literature reports, and allow the estimation of the concentration or dose associated with the chosen quantile without the assumption of the symmetry of the tolerance distribution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prospective Study of the Incidence of Transient Radicular Irritation in Patients Undergoing Spinal Anesthesia

TL;DR: The incidence of TRI is greater with lidocaine than bupivacaine, decreasing the lidocane concentration to 2% does not prevent TRI, and surgical position may be an important contributing factor.
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