The study titled "Factors Influencing Bradycardia During Spinal Anaesthesia in Obstetric Patients Undergoing Caesarean Section"" aims to investigate the causes and patterns of bradycardia in pregnant women receiving spinal anesthesia during cesarean deliveries. Bradycardia, defined as a heart rate below 60 beats per minute, is a known complication of spinal anesthesia, often resulting from sympathetic blockade and unopposed parasympathetic activity. This condition may lead to hypotension, decreased cardiac output, and compromised fetal oxygenation.
The research seeks to enhance the understanding of both patient-specific and procedural risk factors, contributing to improved clinical management, safer anesthesia practices, and better maternal-fetal outcomes. Ethical approval and informed consent protocols are included to ensure participant safety and data confidentiality.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
289
Maqsood Medical complex
Peshawar, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan
structured questionnaire
1. Section A: Demographic and Baseline Information Age, weight, height, gestational age, parity, medical history, medications. 2. Section B: Anesthetic and Surgical Details Indication for cesarean (elective/emergency), baseline heart rate and BP, type/dose of anesthetic, sensory block level, fluid administration, blood loss. 3. Section C: Intraoperative Hemodynamic Events Occurrence of bradycardia (HR \< 60 bpm), lowest HR, time to bradycardia, associated hypotension, interventions used, maternal symptoms. 4. Section D: Neonatal Outcomes Apgar scores at 1 and 5 minutes, NICU admission and reasons. Scoring: There is no numerical scoring system described. Instead: Responses are mostly categorical or numerical entries (e.g., Yes/No, HR value, BP value, Apgar score).
Time frame: 12 Months
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