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Journal ArticleDOI

Fetal risk of anesthesia and surgery during pregnancy.

Peter G. Duncan, +3 more
- 01 Jun 1986 - 
- Vol. 64, Iss: 6, pp 790-794
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TLDR
In an attempt to define the risk to the fetus associated with anesthesia and surgery during pregnancy, a study was performed using health insurance data from the province of Manitoba (1971 to 1978).
Abstract
In an attempt to define the risk to the fetus associated with anesthesia and surgery during pregnancy, a study was performed using health insurance data from the province of Manitoba (1971 to 1978). Each of the 2,565 women undergoing incidental surgery during pregnancy (Group A) was paired with a pregnant female not undergoing surgery (Group B) by maternal age and area of residence. Both groups were linked to a separately maintained provincial congenital-anomalies registry to ascertain the frequency of anomalies. There was no significant difference in the rate of congenital anomalies between the two groups, implying no strong teratogenic effect. However, there was an increased risk of spontaneous abortion in those undergoing surgery with general anesthesia in the first or second trimester, most notably after gynecologic procedures (estimated risk ratio = 2.00), but also following procedures anatomically remote from the conceptus (estimated risk ratio = 1.54). While it is concluded that surgery with general anesthesia is associated with a higher incidence of abortion, it is conjectural at present which factor(s) account for the observed increase in fetal risk.

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Reproductive outcome after anesthesia and operation during pregnancy: A Registry study of 5405 cases

TL;DR: No specific types of anesthesia or operation were associated with increased incidences of adverse reproductive outcomes, but the incidence of very-low- and low-birth-weight-infants were increased; these were the result of both prematurity and intrauterine growth retardation.
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Clinical practice guidelines for sustained neuromuscular blockade in the adult critically ill patient

TL;DR: A Task Force comprising 17 members of the Society of Critical Medicine with particular expertise in the use of neuromuscular-blocking agents met via teleconference and three face-to-face meetings and communicated via e-mail to examine the evidence and develop these practice guidelines.
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Pregnancy outcome following non-obstetric surgical intervention

TL;DR: Modern surgical and anesthesia techniques appear to diminish the rate of maternal death and surgery in the first trimester does not appear to increase major birth defects and should not be delayed when indicated.
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Breast cancer in pregnancy: a literature review.

TL;DR: Physicians should perform a thorough breast examination at the first prenatal visit and maintain a high index of suspicion for cancer, as pregnancy-associated cancers tend to occur at a later stage and be estrogen receptor-negative.
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