Background: Five billion people lack access to surgery. Accurate and complete data have been identified as essential to the global scale-up of perioperative care. This study retrospectively validates the Mbarara Surgical Services Quality Assurance Database (SQUAD), an electronic outcomes database at a Ugandan secondary referral hospital.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBoth transversus abdominis plane block and intrathecal morphine may produce prolonged postoperative analgesia, but the respective clinical outcomes of these anaesthetic techniques in resource-limited settings are not well described. We randomly assigned patients undergoing caesarean section to receive a hyperbaric bupivacaine (10 mg) spinal anaesthetic followed by an ultrasound-guided transversus abdominis plane block, or a hyperbaric bupivacaine (10 mg) spinal anaesthetic with 100 mcg intrathecal morphine, followed by a postoperative sham block. Supplemental postoperative analgesia included self-administered oral diclofenac 50 mg and paracetamol 1 g every 8 h.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 31-year-old multipara was diagnosed with tracheal stenosis that developed after intubation after an intentional benzodiazepine overdose in the first trimester of pregnancy. Tracheal dilations only temporarily improved her dyspnea at rest. A definitive repair by tracheal resection and reconstruction was performed at 28 weeks' gestation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Transversus abdominis plane (TAP) block provides 12-24 h of analgesia to the parietal peritoneum and abdominal wall, and are best used combined with oral or intravenous medications. Despite ease of use, a large margin of safety, and a high success rate, TAP blocks remain under used in settings where patients could most benefit from their use. Previous studies have used oral or intravenous narcotics for supplementation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGen Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
April 2014