Your Article Summary
Obstetric anaesthesia outcome in obese and non-obese parturients undergoing caesarean delivery: an observational study
International Journal of Obstetric Anesthesia , 06/26/09
Bamgbade OA et al. - Maternal obesity is associated with increased difficulty in performing neuraxial anaesthesia, but not with increased failure rate. The study found no differences between obese and non-obese parturients in rate of caesarean deliveries, co-morbidities, indications for delivery or anaesthesia complications.
Related Articles
Remifentanil-PCA to alleviate labor-pain - a true and safe alternative to epidural labor analgesia?
Anästhesiologie, Intensivmedizin, Notfallmedizin, Schmerztherapie : AINS, 10/19/09
Relevance Score: 65%
Difficult and failed intubation in 3430 obstetric general anaesthetics
Anaesthesia, 10/14/09
Relevance Score: 65%
An obstetric patient with neurocadiogenic syncope
International Journal of Obstetric Anesthesia, 10/01/09
Relevance Score: 65%
Does regional anaesthesia improve outcome
Anaesthesia & intensive care medicine, 11/05/09
Relevance Score: 45%
The Efficacy and Safety of Inflatable Obstetric Belts for Management of the Second Stage of Labor
Journal of Korean Medical Science, 10/06/09
Relevance Score: 45%
Today in Ob-Gyn Surgery...keeping you current
Receive free subspecialty "5-minute updates" via email
A prospective comparison of vaginal stump suturing techniques during total laparoscopic hysterectomy
Archives of Gynecology and Obstetrics, 12/16/09
Robotically assisted laparoscopic microsurgical tubal reanastomosis: a retrospective study
Fertility and Sterility, 12/16/09
Old Thymectomized Patient Requiring Plasmapheresis Prior To Spinal Anesthesia For Gynecologic Surgery
The Internet Journal of Anesthesiology, 12/16/09

See Latest Articles