Phenylephrine Added to Prophylactic Ephedrine Infusion during Spinal Anesthesia for Elective Cesarean Section

BackgroundBecause ephedrine infusion (2 mg/min) does not adequately prevent spinal hypotension during cesarean delivery, the authors investigated whether adding phenylephrine would improve its efficacy. MethodsThirty-nine parturients with American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status I–II who were scheduled for cesarean delivery received a crystalloid preload of 15 ml/kg. Spinal anesthesia was performed using 11 mg hyperbaric bupivacaine, 2.5 &mgr;g sufentanil, and 0.1 mg morphine. Maternal heart rate and systolic blood pressure were measured at frequent intervals. A vasopressor infusion was started immediately after spinal injection of either 2 mg/min ephedrine plus 10 &mgr;g/min phenylephrine or 2 mg/min ephedrine alone. Treatments were assigned randomly in a double-blind fashion. The infusion rate was adjusted according to systolic blood pressure using a predefined algorithm. Hypotension, defined as systolic blood pressure less than 100 mmHg and less than 80% of baseline, was treated with 6 mg ephedrine bolus doses. ResultsHypotension occurred less frequently in the ephedrine–phenylephrine group than in the ephedrine-alone group: 37%versus 75% (P = 0.02). Ephedrine (36 ±16 mg, mean ± SD) plus 178 ±81 &mgr;g phenylephrine was infused in former group, whereas 54 ±18 mg ephedrine was infused in the latter. Median supplemental ephedrine requirements and nausea scores (0–3) were less in the ephedrine–phenylephrine group (0 vs. 12 mg, P = 0.02; and 0 vs. 1.5, P = 0.01, respectively). Umbilical artery p H values were significantly higher in the ephedrine–phenylephrine group than in the group that received ephedrine alone (7.24 vs. 7.19). Apgar scores were similarly good in both groups. ConclusionPhenylephrine added to an infusion of ephedrine halved the incidence of hypotension and increased umbilical cord p H.

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