Horner’s syndrome and trigeminal nerve palsy following epidural anaesthesia for obstetrics
Autor: | J. D. Haddox, A. M. Maitra-D'cruze, Juraj Sprung |
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Rok vydání: | 1991 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Anesthesia Epidural medicine.medical_specialty Horner Syndrome Facial Paralysis Horner syndrome Pregnancy Anesthesiology medicine Paralysis Anesthesia Obstetrical Humans Trigeminal Nerve Anesthetics Local Trigeminal nerve Bupivacaine business.industry General Medicine medicine.disease Facial paralysis Epidural space Surgery Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine medicine.anatomical_structure Anesthesia Female medicine.symptom Complication business Procaine medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Canadian Journal of Anaesthesia. 38:767-771 |
ISSN: | 1496-8975 0832-610X |
DOI: | 10.1007/bf03008457 |
Popis: | While Horner's syndrome is a rare but occasionally reported side-effect of epidural block administered for labour, trigeminal nerve palsy has been described only once. The cases described in this report confirmed the benign nature of these neurological complications of epidurally administered anaesthetics which were not detrimental to fetal viability. The complications may be attributed to extensive cephalad spread of local anaesthetic, sometimes via unexplained routes and with surprisingly selective targeting effect (unilateral trigeminal nerve palsy). The atypical and unusually high cephalad spread of local anaesthetic in pregnant women at term is believed to be due to pregnancy-related altered anatomy and physiology of the epidural space. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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