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A Comparative Study of Supine Position and the Head Elevated Position on the Level of Sensory Block After Spinal Anesthesia in Morbidly Obese Parturient Undergoing Elective Cesarean Delivery

Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC) logo

Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC)

Status

Completed

Conditions

High BMI

Treatments

Other: head elevated laryngoscopy position by Oxford pillow

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Industry

Identifiers

NCT06889337
MRC-01-21-032

Details and patient eligibility

About

The sniffing position defined as neck flexion with upper cervical extension, is traditionally recommended for general anesthesia induction, as it improves laryngoscopic views. However, the head elevation beyond the sniffing position, also known as ramped position or head elevated laryngoscopy position, usually achieved by specially designed pillows such as the Oxford head elevating laryngoscopy pillow (Alma Medical,Oxford, UK) or the Troop® elevation pillow (Mercury Medical, Clearwater, FL, USA)has been shown to not only increase respiratory reserve but also to improve laryngeal views in patients undergoing bariatric surgery. Additionally it helps in pre-oxygenating the patient more efficiently by keeping the airway patent and provides easier bag-mask ventilation.

It may also benefit the term parturient in a similar way by improving functional residual capacity (FRC), ventilation and comfort. However, this positon may affect the cephalad spread of the intrathecal local anesthetic.

Two earlier studies looked at the intrathecal local anesthetic spread in obstetric patients when placed in the head elevated laryngoscopy position, and both suggested poor cephalad spread, with patients requiring higher supplementation.

However, both studies excluded morbidly obese patients. The Investigators hypothesized that in obese parturients with BMI more than or equal 40, higher intra-abdominal pressures and possibly lower CSF volumes will counteract the poor cephalad spread associated with this position. The aim of this study is to determine the effect of a ramped position on intrathecal local anesthetic spread in the morbidly obese term parturients with BMI more than or equal 40 undergoing elective Cesarean delivery(CD).

Enrollment

90 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age 18yrs of age or more
  • BMI 40 or more and more than or equal 37 weeks of gestation
  • elective CD
  • consented for neuraxial anesthesia
  • singleton fetus
  • ASA class 3 (no co-morbidities except morbid obesity, gestational diabetes, and gestational hypothyroidism)

Exclusion criteria

  • Age <18 years
  • BMI less than 39.9 and <37 weeks of gestation
  • parturient preference for general anesthesia or contraindication to neuraxial anesthesia
  • Women with comorbidities other than obesity, gestational diabetes or gestational hypothyroidism.
  • women in active labor (>3 cm dilated with regular uterine contractions)
  • emergency CD
  • Possible uterine over-distension or under-distension (e.g. polyhydramnios, estimated fetal weight >4 kg by ultrasound scan, or oligohydramnios or concern for fetal IUGR)
  • maternal height <150 cm or >180 cm.
  • Patients for which more than 2 minutes is taken in positioning after anesthesia induction (Time 0).

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

90 participants in 2 patient groups

HEAD ELEVATING LARYNGOSCOPY PILLOW
Experimental group
Description:
the head elevation beyond the sniffing position, also known as ramped position or head elevated laryngoscopy position, usually achieved by specially designed pillows such as the Oxford head elevating laryngoscopy pillow (Alma Medical, Oxford, UK) or the Troop® elevation pillow (Mercury Medical, Clearwater, FL, USA)
Treatment:
Other: head elevated laryngoscopy position by Oxford pillow
Standard pillow group
No Intervention group
Description:
Standard pillow group

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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