J Matern Fetal Neonatal Med
October 2022
Background: Neonatal resuscitation training is a requirement for all obstetric anesthesia fellows. However, while the majority of anesthesiologists who work on labor and delivery report having been involved in the resuscitation of a newborn, most do not have NRP training.
Objective: By studying a national cohort of anesthesiologists, our objective was to identify factors associated with knowledge and comfort with neonatal resuscitation and to inform decisions about neonatal resuscitation in obstetric anesthesia fellowship training.
A 56-year-old man with a history of coronary artery disease, 4 months of cough and shortness of breath, a new lung mass, and increasing hypoxemia presented to the operating room emergently for a subxiphoid pericardial window for cardiac tamponade. After 1200 mL of pericardial fluid was drained, the patient immediately went into acutely decompensated right heart failure as seen on a transesophageal echocardiogram. The patient had cardiovascular collapse refractory to high-dose vasopressors, necessitating emergent venous-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for successful resuscitation.
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