Mhyre J M, Greenfield M L V H, Polley L S
Department of Anesthesiology, Division of Obstetric Anesthesiology, Women's Hospital, University of Michigan Health System, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-0048, USA.
Int J Obstet Anesth. 2007 Oct;16(4):316-22. doi: 10.1016/j.ijoa.2007.03.001. Epub 2007 Jul 23.
Maternal obesity is increasing in prevalence and associated with numerous complications. Surveys document that obstetricians recognize the obstetric and perinatal health risks of maternal obesity. To determine if they recognize the anesthetic risks and discuss them antenatally with obese patients, we surveyed all obstetric providers at a university-affiliated obstetric unit.
The survey listed complications of obesity and pregnancy sampled from the literature, including eight anesthetic complications, ten prenatal obstetric complications, ten intrapartum or postpartum obstetric complications, five medical complications and five neonatal complications. Respondents reported if and when they routinely discuss each. Reported routine discussion rates were averaged across respondents and complication categories. We postulated that anesthetic aspects would be discussed less frequently than others.
Thirty-six of the 55 obstetric providers responded (65.5%). On average, anesthetic complications were discussed during prenatal care 13.5% of the time, less often than prenatal obstetric complications (48.5%, Wilcoxon signed rank test, P<0.0001), intrapartum or postpartum obstetric complications (40.0%, Wilcoxon signed rank test, P<0.0001) and medical complications (35.0%, Wilcoxon signed rank test, P=0.0001). The survey failed to demonstrate a statistically significant difference in the rate of discussion between anesthetic and neonatal complications (13.5% vs. 22.2%, Wilcoxon signed rank test, P=0.05). Twenty-four respondents reported that they did not routinely discuss any of the listed anesthetic complications with their obese patients in the prenatal period.
This preliminary study suggests that antenatal education about the anesthetic implications of obesity may not be part of routine prenatal care for obese pregnant women.
孕产妇肥胖的患病率正在上升,且与众多并发症相关。调查表明,产科医生认识到孕产妇肥胖对产科及围产期健康的风险。为了确定他们是否认识到麻醉风险并在产前与肥胖患者讨论这些风险,我们对一家大学附属医院产科部门的所有产科医护人员进行了调查。
该调查列出了从文献中选取的肥胖与妊娠的并发症,包括8种麻醉并发症、10种产前产科并发症、10种产时或产后产科并发症、5种内科并发症和5种新生儿并发症。受访者报告他们是否以及何时会常规讨论每种并发症。将报告的常规讨论率按受访者和并发症类别进行平均计算。我们推测麻醉方面的讨论频率会低于其他方面。
55名产科医护人员中有36人回复(65.5%)。平均而言,在产前检查期间讨论麻醉并发症的时间占13.5%,低于产前产科并发症(48.5%,Wilcoxon符号秩检验,P<0.0001)、产时或产后产科并发症(40.0%,Wilcoxon符号秩检验,P<0.0001)和内科并发症(35.0%,Wilcoxon符号秩检验,P=0.0001)。该调查未能证明麻醉并发症和新生儿并发症的讨论率存在统计学上的显著差异(13.5%对22.2%,Wilcoxon符号秩检验,P=0.05)。24名受访者报告说,他们在产前不会常规与肥胖患者讨论任何列出的麻醉并发症。
这项初步研究表明,关于肥胖对麻醉影响的产前教育可能不是肥胖孕妇常规产前护理的一部分。