Resuscitation in pregnancy article omitted several points
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《英国医生杂志》
EDITOR—Morris and Stacey in their clinical review of resuscitation in pregnancy should have mentioned several points.1 As the primary indication for caesarean section is saving the mother, saving the baby being secondary if it is at a viable gestation, no time should be wasted in auscultation for fetal heart rate before the caesarean. A neonatologist should be available to resuscitate the infant immediately after birth.
To achieve delivery by five minutes from cardiac arrest the caesarean should be initiated three to four minutes into the arrest. The most senior obstetrician available should ideally be performing the procedure as familiarity with safe rapid delivery techniques is essential. A classic uterine incision may be quicker at extreme prematurity than the usual transverse incision into the lower uterine segment.
Women with chronic maternal illness such as hypertensive disease or fetal illness such as severe growth restriction before the cardiac arrest are less likely to have a neurologically intact and surviving infant than women with healthy pregnancies. The five minute limit to achieve fetal delivery seems to have been arbitrarily chosen and is based on the theoretical advantages in resuscitating the mother, as well as extrapolation of data on infant survival. Katz et al showed that infants delivered within five minutes tended to survive and be neurologically normal, whereas those delivered beyond 10 minutes either died or survived with neurological compromise.2
Because cardiac arrest is usually unexpected and equipment not always accessible, it may be good practice to prepare a local guideline and "sterile delivery pack." This could be distributed to the hospital's accident and emergency and obstetric departments, along with frequent clinical training drills. Unfortunately the recent guideline on caesarean section from the National Institute for Clinical Excellence and the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists does not discuss this important life saving indication for caesarean section.3
Rajesh Varma, clinical fellow
Academic Department, Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Birmingham Women's Hospital, Birmingham B15 2TG r.varma@bham.ac.uk
Competing interests: None declared.
References
Morris S, Stacey M. Resuscitation in pregnancy. BMJ 2003;327: 1277-9. (29 November.)
Katz VL, Dotters DJ, Droegemueller W. Perimortem cesarean delivery. Obstet Gynecol 1986;68: 571-6.
National Institute for Clinical Excellence, Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists. Caesarean section guideline. London: National Collaborating Centre for Women's and Children's Health., 2003. www.nice.org.uk/article.asp?a=94037 (accessed 14 Dec 2003).
To achieve delivery by five minutes from cardiac arrest the caesarean should be initiated three to four minutes into the arrest. The most senior obstetrician available should ideally be performing the procedure as familiarity with safe rapid delivery techniques is essential. A classic uterine incision may be quicker at extreme prematurity than the usual transverse incision into the lower uterine segment.
Women with chronic maternal illness such as hypertensive disease or fetal illness such as severe growth restriction before the cardiac arrest are less likely to have a neurologically intact and surviving infant than women with healthy pregnancies. The five minute limit to achieve fetal delivery seems to have been arbitrarily chosen and is based on the theoretical advantages in resuscitating the mother, as well as extrapolation of data on infant survival. Katz et al showed that infants delivered within five minutes tended to survive and be neurologically normal, whereas those delivered beyond 10 minutes either died or survived with neurological compromise.2
Because cardiac arrest is usually unexpected and equipment not always accessible, it may be good practice to prepare a local guideline and "sterile delivery pack." This could be distributed to the hospital's accident and emergency and obstetric departments, along with frequent clinical training drills. Unfortunately the recent guideline on caesarean section from the National Institute for Clinical Excellence and the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists does not discuss this important life saving indication for caesarean section.3
Rajesh Varma, clinical fellow
Academic Department, Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Birmingham Women's Hospital, Birmingham B15 2TG r.varma@bham.ac.uk
Competing interests: None declared.
References
Morris S, Stacey M. Resuscitation in pregnancy. BMJ 2003;327: 1277-9. (29 November.)
Katz VL, Dotters DJ, Droegemueller W. Perimortem cesarean delivery. Obstet Gynecol 1986;68: 571-6.
National Institute for Clinical Excellence, Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists. Caesarean section guideline. London: National Collaborating Centre for Women's and Children's Health., 2003. www.nice.org.uk/article.asp?a=94037 (accessed 14 Dec 2003).