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Oxford Textbook of Obstetric Anaesthesia [Kõva köide]

Edited by (, Consultant Anaesthetist and Honorary Senior Lecturer, Departm), Edited by (Professor of Anaesthesia, Catholic University Leuven and the Leuven University Hospitals), Edited by (Clinical Lead in Obstetric Anaesthesia, Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh, Scotland)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 1008 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 281x222x43 mm, kaal: 2648 g
  • Sari: Oxford Textbooks in Anaesthesia
  • Ilmumisaeg: 08-Sep-2016
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0198713339
  • ISBN-13: 9780198713333
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 1008 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 281x222x43 mm, kaal: 2648 g
  • Sari: Oxford Textbooks in Anaesthesia
  • Ilmumisaeg: 08-Sep-2016
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0198713339
  • ISBN-13: 9780198713333
Teised raamatud teemal:
From early conception until the postpartum period, anaesthetists are required to provide pregnant women with the highest standard of anaesthetic care and pain relief whilst negotiating challenges such as concurrent systemic disease, infertility, and obesity as well as practicing in accordance with new developments in fetal medicine surgery, pharmacology, and imaging. TheOxford Textbook of Obstetric Anaesthesia provides an up-to-date summary of the scientific basis, assessment for and provision of anaesthesia throughout pregnancy and labour.

This highly authoritative textbook is conceptually divided into nine sections, detailing maternal and fetal physiology, fetal and neonatal assessment and therapy, anaesthesia before and during pregnancy, labour and vaginal delivery, anaesthesia for caesarean delivery, anaesthetic and obstetric complications, as well as systemic disease. Individual chapters address topics such as simulation and ultrasound.

Authored by an international team of expert anaesthetists this textbook reflects current world-wide practice and guidelines. Designed for consultants and trainees in anaesthesia, theOxford Textbook of Obstetric Anaesthesia is the definitive source of expert knowledge for anaesthetists in this subspecialty.

Arvustused

...a significant contribution in the provision of safe anesthesia for obstetric patients...I congratulate the contributors for their efforts in bringing the practice of obstetric anesthesia to a higher level * Samina Ismail, Anaesthesia Pain and Intensive Care, Vol 20, No 4 *

Abbreviations xiii
Contributors xvii
PART 1 History of obstetric anaesthesia
1 Historic timeline of obstetric anaesthesia
3(29)
Alistair G. McKenzie
PART 2 Maternal and fetal physiology
2 Physiological changes associated with pregnancy
32(17)
Roulhac D. Toledano
3 Placenta and uteroplacental perfusion
49(9)
Marie-Pierre Bonnet
Anne Alice Chantry
4 Fetal and neonatal physiology
58(10)
Thierry Girard
Thomas Erb
5 Maternal, fetal, and neonatal pharmacokinetics
68(13)
Karel Allegaert
Kristel Van Calsteren
PART 3 Fetal and neonatal assessment and therapy
6 Antenatal and intrapartum fetal evaluation
81(21)
Yves Jacquemyn
Anneke Kwee
7 Fetal medicine, fetal anaesthesia, and fetal surgery
102(25)
Francesca Russo
Tim Van Mieghem
Jan Deprest
8 Neonatal assessment and therapy
127(22)
Ewen D. Johnston
Julie-Clare Becher
PART 4 Fertility treatment, anaesthesia for non-obstetric surgery, and drugs in pregnancy and lactation
9 Fertility treatment in the modern age: possibilities and anaesthesia
149(8)
Diane De Neubourg
Sarah Devroe
10 Anaesthesia for non-obstetric surgery
157(9)
Vegard Dahl
Ulrich J. Spreng
11 Drugs in pregnancy and lactation
166(13)
Oliver Kraemer
Timothee Fraisse
PART 5 Obstetric management of labour and labour analgesia
12 Obstetric management of labour, delivery, and vaginal birth after caesarean delivery
179(22)
Roland Devlieger
Maria-Elisabeth Smet
13 Non-pharmacological methods of pain relief and systemic analgesia in labour
201(26)
Grace McClune
David Hill
14 Initiation of neuraxial labour analgesia
227(17)
Eva Roofthooft
Sarah Devroe
Marc Van de Velde
15 Maintenance of neuraxial labour analgesia
244(9)
Alex Tiong Heng Sia
Ban Leong Sng
Serene Leo
16 Labour analgesia: choice of local anaesthetics
253(7)
Giorgio Capogna
17 Adjuvant drugs in neuraxial anaesthesia
260(18)
Catherine Cromey
Susan Carling
18 Alternative neural blocks for labour analgesia
278(9)
Outi Palomaki
Petri Volmanen
19 Prevention and management of breakthrough pain during neuraxial labour analgesia
287(10)
Jessica Bauerle
Mieke A. Soens
PART 6 Anaesthesia for caesarean delivery
20 Neuraxial anaesthesia for caesarean delivery
297(26)
Sarah L. Armstrong
Michelle Walters
Katherine Cheesman
Geraldine O'Sullivan
21 Intraoperative management of inadequate neuraxial anaesthesia
323(14)
Tauqeer Husain
Roshan Fernando
22 General anaesthesia for caesarean delivery
337(13)
David M. Levy
Leva Saule
23 The aetiology and management of hypotension during spinal anaesthesia for caesarean delivery
350(15)
Robert A. Dyer
Michelle J. Arcache
Eldrid Langesaeter
24 Postoperative analgesia after caesarean delivery
365(15)
Sarah L. Armstrong
Gary M. Stocks
25 Persistent pain after caesarean delivery and vaginal birth
380(13)
Patricia Lavand'homme
Fabienne Roelants
PART 7 Anaesthetic complications
26 Management of the difficult airway
393(26)
Mary C. Mushambi
Rajesh Pandey
27 Postdural puncture headache
419(15)
Michael J. Paech
Patchareya Nivatpumin
28 Neurological complications of neuraxial blockade
434(20)
Vibeke Moen
29 Medicolegal issues
454(17)
Elizabeth Combeer
Rehana Iqbal
Steve Yentis
PART 8 Obstetric complications
30 High dependency and intensive care
471(23)
Philip Barclay
Helen Scholefield
31 Maternal mortality and morbidity
494(20)
Suni Haider
Steve Yentis
32 Problems in early pregnancy
514(9)
W. Colin Duncan
33 Prematurity, multiple gestation, and abnormal presentation
523(11)
Oonagh Keag
E. Sarah Cooper
34 Sepsis in obstetrics
534(17)
Nuala Lucas
Colleen D. Acosta
Marian Knight
35 Obstetric haemorrhage
551(16)
Jane E. Norman
Vicki Clark
36 Hypertension in pregnancy
567(20)
John A. Anderson
Pierre-Antoine Laloe
Derek J. Tuffnell
37 Thromboembolic disorders in pregnancy
587(10)
Salma Ballal
Ian A. Greer
38 Amniotic fluid embolism (anaphylactoid syndrome of pregnancy)
597(10)
John A. Anderson
Pierre-Antoine Laloe
Derek J. Tuffnell
PART 9 Systemic disease in pregnancy
39 The obese parturient
607(14)
Fiona C. Denison
Alistair Milne
40 Moderate to complex congenital heart disease
621(16)
Daryl P. Dob
Elspeth E. Pickering
Michael A. Gatzoulis
41 Acquired heart disease
637(22)
Linzi Peacock
Rachel Hignett
42 Respiratory disease
659(17)
Wendy H. L. Teoh
43 Liver disorders
676(11)
Chris Verslype
David Cassiman
Johan Verhaeghe
44 Kidney disease
687(16)
Kate Wiles
Kate Bramham
Catherine Nelson-Piercy
45 Neurological disease
703(21)
James Griffiths
Kate Drummond
46 Musculoskeletal disorders
724(24)
James P. R. Brown
M. Joanne Douglas
47 Endocrine and autoimmune disorders
748(22)
Mirjana Kendrisic
Borislava Pujic
48 Obstetric haematology
770(25)
Sapna Ladani
Beverley J. Hunt
Sue Pavord
49 Peripartum psychiatric disorders
795(8)
Roch Cantwell
50 Chronic maternal infections
803(12)
Kristel Van Calsceren
51 Substance abuse
815(26)
Ross Junkin
Elizabeth M. McGrady
PART 10 Recent advances in obstetric anaesthesia
52 Genetics
841(11)
Ruth Landau
Clemens Ortner
53 Simulation
852(16)
Mark Wigginton
Miguel Garcia
Timothy J. Draycott
Neil A. Muchatuta
54 Ultrasound
868(12)
Sudhir Immani
John Loughrey
55 International outreach
880(17)
Gordon Yuill
Simon Millar
Appendix 1 Guidelines 897(50)
Wint Mon
York-Mui Liu
Ioanna Mavridou
Roshan Fernando
Appendix 2 Scores and scales 947(14)
Wint Mon
York-Mui Liu
Ioanna Mavridou
Roshan Fernando
Index 961
Dr Vicki Clark was born in Guyana in the West Indies and graduated from Edinburgh University. She did her Anaesthetic training in both Glasgow and Edinburgh and was appointed as a Consultant Anaesthetist with special interest in Obstetric Anaesthesia in the Simpson Centre for Reproductive Health, the largest maternity unit in Scotland. She has been an elected member for two terms on the committee of the Obstetric Anaesthetists' Association. Dr Clark has an interest in teaching and training and has lectured extensively particularly on obstetric haemorrhage and cell salvage. Throughout her career she has served on several committees and charities promoting maternal health and been involved in workshops on obstetric anaesthesia in developing countries.



Professor Marc Van de Velde graduated from the Catholic University of Louvain in Belgium in 1991. He completed his residency in Anaesthesiology in 1996 at the University Hospitals of Louvain. In 2000, he received his PhD degree following research related to metabolic support of the stunned myocardium. From November 2010 onwards, he is Head of the Department Anesthesiology at the Catholic University Leuven and Full Professor at the Leuven University Hospitals. He was member of the Committee of the Obstetric Anaesthetists Association from 2003 - 2009 and is currently president of the European Society of Regional Anaesthesia and Pain Therapy (ESRA). He is chair of the Scientific Committee of the Annual ESRA Meetings in Ljubljana 2015 and Maastricht 2016. He is also Chair of the Scientific Subcommittee on Obstetric Anesthesia of the European Society of Anesthesiology (ESA).



Dr. Fernando graduated from the University College of Wales Medical School, Cardiff, South Wales, UK and completed his advanced anesthesia training at the Hammersmith and Queen Charlotte's Hospitals in London, becoming a consultant anaesthetist in 1994. Since 2008 he has worked for University College London Hospital where he now coordinates mainly clinical research in obstetric anaesthesia. He served as the Honorary Treasurer for the 2,500 member Obstetric Anaesthetists' Association (OAA) for 6 years, chaired its Scientific & Educational Meetings subcommittee for a further 6 years, and became OAA President in May 2014. He has also worked for 6 years as part of the Obstetric Anaesthesia subcommittee of the European Society of Anaesthesiology (ESA) and for 10 years as an examiner for the Royal College of Anaesthetists, finishing his duties in June 2013. He is currently serving a 4-year term on the Council of the Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain & Ireland (AAGBI).