A podcast discussing critical care, anaesthesia and pain medicine in obstetrics and gynaecology
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Hi everyone, This week I am joined again by Dr David Owen an obstetrician here at KEMH. We sit down to discuss uterine inversion – an acute obstetric emergency. Luckily this condition is relatively rare – however because of this there can be challenges in recognising and treating this condition even amongst experienced individuals. Should you be un…
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140 The Placenta Accreta Spectrum Team at KEMH Part two.
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53:11Hi Everyone, Welcome to Part Two of our discussion with two of the founding members of the Placenta Accreta Spectrum Team here at KEMH Dr Matt Epee-Bekima and Dr David Owen. This team was conceived in 2017 and began operating in 2018 – and has now cared for over 75 women with PAS – including 24 alone this year (2024). In this episode we continue ou…
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139 The Placenta Accreta Spectrum Team at KEMH Part one
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40:40Hi Everyone, This week I had the privilege of sitting down and recording two fascinating episodes with two of the founding members of the Placenta Accreta Spectrum Team from here at KEMH, Dr Matt Epee-Bekima and Dr David Owen. In this first episode we discuss the following: Definitions and pathology of placenta accreta spectrum What is the story be…
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138 Journal club with Graeme IJOA Nov 2024
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32:24Hi Everyone, Join Graeme and I as we discuss two articles chosen from last months edition of IJOA (International Journal of Obstetric Anesthesia). In the first we discuss an article exploring whether the use of intermittent calf compression can reduce hypotension and vasopressor use in women undergoing caesarean section under spinal anaesthesia. Th…
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137 GLP1 agonists and anaesthesia a discussion with Erin
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44:10The next patient on your elective list arrives in theatre. She is a 35 year old woman booked for hysteroscopy to investigate her menorrhagia. She has no co-morbidities so wasn’t seen preoperatively in a clinic. She tells you that she has no medical problems but did start on Wegovy for weight loss about 4months ago and has now lost about 12kg. She h…
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Your patient arrives in the anaesthetic room next to theatre, she’s booked for a non elective caesarean for failure to progress. She has an epidural in situ and you decide try to top it up – however after 25ml of lignocaine 2% with adrenaline and around 20min of waiting the block is stuck at the umbilicus and she can still move her legs relatively …
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What is the EXIT procedure? Who is it used for and how do we do it? In our institution this procedure only occurs on average every 3-4 years. It is an event where a large diverse group of individuals, who often have never met each other, come together for a brief period of time to work as a highly complex team to achieve a great result for both the…
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Hi Everyone, This week Matt and I agreed to get together to do another journal club episode (or more accurately I printed out an article, put it in Matt’s pigeon hole and told him to make himself available or else!). We went to one of our favourite journals IJOA (International Journal of Obstetric Anesthesia), where we chose an article from the lat…
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133 NAP7 a discussion and review with Jacob
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44:50Hi everyone, This week I sit down with Jacob one of the provisional fellows in our department and we discuss the findings from the latest UK National Audit Project – NAP7 – which this time investigated Perioperative cardiac arrest. REFERENCES NAP7 – Royal College of AnaesthetistsBy Roger Browning - Anaesthetist
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132 The soiled airway with Nathan Blakely
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46:52A woman collapses with abdominal pain in a restaurant & then the initial evaluation in the ED she is diagnosed with suspected ruptured ectopic pregnancy. She is brought straight into your theatre and you perform a rapid sequence induction. You place your video laryngoscope into her mouth and all you see is vomitus and fluid, your yankauer sucker is…
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131 Hyperkalaemia in Pre Eclampsia a discussion with Natalie Smith
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32:26As the DA you are paged to come to PACU to review a patient with pre-eclampsia who has just had a PPH and a repair of a perineal tear after delivering in labour ward. The O&G team ordered a VBG because she was febrile and they want to assess her lactate and start her on some antibiotics. The O&G registrar is concerned however because her potassium …
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130 Coagulopathy in abruption a discussion with Graeme
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30:25You receive a page from labour ward. A woman at 35/40 weeks gestation has just arrived in the hospital very distressed in a lot of pain. A quick bedside ultrasound by the obstetric team has unfortunately demonstrated a large abruption and fetal death in utero. She is contracting strongly and beside herself in pain, the team would like you to come d…
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129 Is there a doctor on the plane – a discussion with Ilan.
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1:08:56You recline your seat back, adjust your neck pillow, eye mask and close your eyes. Finally you are about to have that well earned nap. It was exhausting having to get up at 3am to head to the airport for this unpleasantly scheduled early flight. As your mind drifts towards sleep your thoughts are interrupted by a loud announcement by one of the cab…
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128 Uterine rupture a discussion with Dr David Owen
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30:40You are called to review a woman in labour ward. When you arrive you are told her epidural is no longer working. The epidural was placed by a colleague 5 hours ago and was working well. However in the last 20-30 minutes she has developed breakthrough pain despite a top up and pressing the PCEA a few times. You look at her back and the epidural dres…
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127 Maternal mortality reports with Dr Matt Rucklidge
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57:11A maternal death is always a tragic event for the mother, the child, the family and society at large. Unfortunately in some parts of the globe this is still a much too common event. Luckily for those of us living in higher resource countries it has now become relatively rare.This week Matt and I sat down together to discuss the history of maternal …
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126 Anaesthetic management of the pregnant woman with Achondroplasia with Declan
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34:15As the duty anaesthetist you are called down to the antenatal clinic by the obstetric team to see a pregnant woman with achondroplasia who is booked to deliver in your hospital.What are the anaesthetic issues which can arise in this condition? What evidence is there in the literature for the optimal anaesthetic techniques? What will you discuss wit…
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You are called to a code blue on the postnatal ward. A 28 yr old female who is 1 day post a non elective caesarean section has just had a witnessed convulsion lasting 1-2 min. She has now regained consciousness but seems a little confused and is complaining that she "has lost vision in both of her eyes". Her BP is 180/100, and all other vital signs…
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Hi everyone,Join us this episode - Declan and I have scoured the literature for a few interesting articles of varying degrees of quality! We had fun discussing these articles and hopefully you will also enjoy our discussion.Hopefully we will make this a regular feature every 3-4 months!Articles Discussed1 - Effect of Dural-Puncture Epidural vs Stan…
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123 Obstetric anaesthesia and the abnormal spine with Graeme
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34:03You are called to labour ward to place an epidural in a nulliparous woman who is obviously extremely distressed in pain. After you sit her up to clean her back you notice she has a long scar running down the middle of her back. Between contractions she tells you she had surgery as a teenager to straighten her back.....what does this mean?Hi Everyon…
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122 Reflections on the THOR THUNDER conference with Graeme and Emelyn
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42:36Hi Everyone,Whole blood, freeze dried plasma, refrigerated or frozen platelets....On Oct 31st - Nov 3 Graeme, Emelyn and I attended the THOR - THUNDER conference hosted here in Perth at the Rendezvous Hotel in Scarborough. Who is THOR? In their own words:The THOR (trauma haemostasis oxygenation resuscitation) organization is a resuscitation and blo…
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121 PBM Case discussion with Anastazia and Nolan part 3 blood is not an option.
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42:44Hi everyone,Welcome to part 3 of a 3 part series we have put together – 3 hypothetical cases involving anaemia / patient blood management scenarios. Thanks to the two great colleagues who made these discussions with me, Dr Anastazia Keegan Head of Haematology here at KEMH and Assoc Prof Nolan McDonnell a colleague from our Department of Anaesthesia…
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120 PBM case discussion with Anastazia and Nolan part 2 postpartum anaemia
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36:26Hi everyone,Welcome to part 2 of a 3 part series we have put together – 3 hypothetical cases involving anaemia / patient blood management scenarios. Thanks to the two great colleagues who made these discussions with me, Dr Anastazia Keegan Head of Haematology here at KEMH and Assoc Prof Nolan McDonnell a colleague from our Department of Anaesthesia…
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119 PBM case discussion with Anastazia and Nolan part 1 preop anaemia
40:25
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40:25Hi everyone,Welcome to part 1 of a 3 part series we have put together - 3 hypothetical cases involving anaemia / patient blood management scenarios. Thanks to the two great colleagues who made these discussions with me, Dr Anastazia Keegan Head of Haematology here at KEMH and Assoc Prof Nolan McDonnell a colleague from our Department of Anaesthesia…
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118 Challenges of lactate interpretation with Tim and Declan
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43:56You are phoned and asked to review the venous blood gas from a woman who has just given birth in labour ward. She had a long and difficult labour and eventually required an instrumental delivery. The RMO tells you also that she was very difficult to take blood from and the tourniquet was on her arm for quite a long time. Her results show that she h…
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117 Toxicity of neuraxial tranexamic acid with Graeme
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40:03Hi Everyone,"Three minutes after the administration on the spinal anaesthetic they became restless and complained of severe pain in both lower limbs and back. Their heart rate and blood pressure increased to 130bpm and 160/100 mmHg. A rapid survey of previously administered medications revealed tranexamic acid 300mg was accidentally injected into t…
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116 Epidural local anaesthetics and another TXA article with Siv
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41:59Hi Everyone,Join Siv and I as we sit down to discuss a couple of interesting obstetric related topics. The first is the pharmacology around the choice and strength of local anaesthetics used in epidural analgesia - thanks Siv. The second part we discuss a very large pragmatic study in the New England Journal of Medicine of 11000 women studying the …
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115 Congenital bleeding disorders in pregnancy with Dr Anastazia Keegan
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54:54Hi Everyone,This week we are joined by Dr Anastazia Keegan an obstetric haematologist and the head of Haematology at our Women's hospital here in Western Australia. Join us as Anastazia educates us about congenital bleeding disorders in pregnancy - the common ones, Von Willebrands disease and haemophilia - and how to approach a woman with one of th…
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114 Highlights from the OA SIG Meeting Sydney part 2
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41:52Hi Everyone,This is part 2 of a discussion (see the previous episode for part 1).We have just returned from the Obstetric Anaesthesia Special Interest Group Satellite meeting held on May 3-4. I sat down two days after the meeting with Dr Matt Rucklidge (the convenor of this meeting and a colleague here at KEMH) and Prof Nuala Lucas one of the keyno…
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113 Highlights from the OA SIG Meeting Sydney part 1
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32:00Hi Everyone,We have just returned from the Obstetric Anaesthesia Special Interest Group Satellite meeting held on May 3-4. I sat down two days after the meeting with Dr Matt Rucklidge (the convenor of this meeting and a colleague here at KEMH) and Prof Nuala Lucas one of the keynote invited speakers from the UK who is the president of the OAA UK (O…
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112 Peripartum hyponatraemia with Jess & Siv
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43:48You are called to a code blue medical on labour ward - a previously well nulliparous woman has just had a seizure, and now seems confused. Her observations are normal, she is not hypertensive and the CTG appears fine. She is presumed to have had an eclamptic seizure and is given oxygen, magnesium and has some urgent pre-eclampsia bloods and urine s…
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111 – Remifentanil PCA in labour – the Belfast experience with Mike Jamison
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47:44Hi Everyone,In our tertiary women's hospital here in Perth we use remifentanil PCA in labour approximately 15 times a year - and we are told that in Australian terms this is considered a "heavy user" of this labour analgesic technqiue.This week I sit down with Mike Jamison an anaesthetic fellow from Belfast spending a year with us here in Perth. Wh…
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110 Rare diseases and OrphanAnesthesia with Siv and Sarah.
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23:41You are referred a patient who needs urgent surgery and the obstetrician tells you she has some obscure medical condition which you have never heard of before. Does her condition have any implications for the safe conduct of anaesthesia? How can you find out in a timely manner what the specific anaesthetic issues are and what anaesthetics have been…
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109 Radial arterial line strategies to prevent failure with Graeme & Siv
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35:07Arterial lines - let's face it who doesn't love them? When you have a truly sick patient these humble and often underrated devices bring so much to the table, precise control of the haemodynamics, assessment of gas exchange, blood sampling to assess coagulation, anaemia and many other parameters. There is nothing more frustrating however when these…
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108 Postoperative pulmonary complications and protective lung ventilation strategies with Lloyd Green
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52:53(Hypothetical case) You are called to the PACU to review a patient, who despite face mask oxygen has saturations of only 88%. She is a woman in her 50s who has just undergone a 3 hour laparoscopic hysterectomy for endometrial cancer. She has a BMI of 48, has been a smoker for 30 years, and had a chest infection 3 weeks ago. When she walked into the…
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107 TIVA for GA caesarean with Parita & Sneha
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39:08Hi everyone,This week three of us sit down to discuss a great review article (and topic) - the use of TIVA (total intravenous anaesthesia) for GA caesarean surgery. For many the classic technique for a GA caesarean has been thio / sux tube then volatile & nitrous oxide. In recent years many aspects of this have started to change with propofol proba…
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106 NRFIT and wrong route errors – a discussion with Graeme.
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27:49Hi Everyone,You receive a phone call at 2am from a junior colleague who tells you that they are managing a code blue caesarean section and in the confusion of urgently administering a number of different medications they have just accidentally injected 10ml of cephazolin into the epidural catheter instead of the intravenous tubing. They are underst…
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105 Nitrous oxide for labour analgesia with Graeme
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37:40Hi everyone,This week Graeme and I sit down for the first time in nearly a year and do a bit of a deep dive on the use of nitrous oxide as an analgesic in labour. We drop a few dad jokes, discuss the history of inhaled analgesics, nitrous oxide use around the world, the evidence, the environmental concerns and other interesting anecdotes.Do you hav…
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104 Oral midodrine a discussion with Rheily
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20:47Your 76 yr old patient is now two days post her laparotomy for ovarian cancer. She looks well, is starting to eat and keen to get up to the shower as well as have all the "annoying lines and tubes removed from my arms!".Unfortunately she is still on 3ml/hr of a metaraminol infusion and everytime the nurse tries to wean it off her BP drops to 70/45.…
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103 How to perform an epidural blood patch.
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56:08Hi everyone,This week Sneha leads a discussion with both Matt and myself where we take a deep dive into how to actually perform an epidural blood patch. Even though you can't really classify this as an uncommon procedure, as individuals we probably don't do very many and it is hard for most of us to become experienced and "expert" (whatever that is…
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102 Neuraxial anaesthesia for caesarean delivery part two
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39:01Welcome to this podcast, the tenth in our series of obstetric anaesthesia basics. Join us for this the second part of a conversation where we discuss all things relating to neuraxial anaesthesia for Caesarean section. Due to it’s length we have split this discussion into two parts – who would have thought we could talk for so long about this! (I th…
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101 Neuraxial anaesthesia for Caesarean section Part one
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39:42Welcome to this podcast, the ninth in our series of obstetric anaesthesia basics. Join us for this the first part of a conversation where we discuss all things relating to neuraxial anaesthesia for Caesarean section. Due to it’s length we have split this discussion into two parts – who would have thought we could talk for so long about this! (I tho…
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100 Learning from real haemorrhage case discussions
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40:19Hi everyone,Join us this week as we briefly celebrate the 100th episode - almost exactly 5 years after the first episodes aired. Then we sit down to discuss some real haemorrhage cases - a follow up on our promise from the earlier episode 97 where we discuss the basics of managing obstetric haemorrhage.Thanks Graeme, Shilpa and Matt!Links097 Obstet…
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099 Maternal sepsis with Jess and Sneha Part 2
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40:35Hi everyone,This is the second episode of two, where I sit down with my anaesthetic colleague Sneha and senior ICU trainee Jess to discuss the important and sometimes scary topic of maternal sepsis. Join us as in this second episode where we discuss amongst many things.antibioticsfluids & vasopressorsmulti-organ dysfunctionsource controlanecdotes &…
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098 Maternal sepsis with Jess and Sneha Part 1
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38:13Hi everyone,This is the first episode of two, where I sit down with my anaesthetic colleague Sneha and senior ICU trainee Jess to discuss the important and sometimes scary topic of maternal sepsis. Join us as in this first episode where we discuss amongst many things the recent changes in how sepsis is defineddetection and recognition in pregnancyc…
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Welcome to this podcast, the eighth in our series of obstetric anaesthesia basics. Join us for this conversation where we discuss all things relating to obstetric haemorrhage, a much feared and common obstetric emergency. Thanks Shilpa, Matt & Roger!BASICS OF OBSTETRIC ANAESTHESIAThe “Basics of Obstetric Anaesthesia” is a short series of podcasts, …
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096 General anaesthesia for Caesarean section part 2
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26:11Welcome to this podcast, the seventh in our series of obstetric anaesthesia basics. Join us for this the second part of a conversation where we discuss all things relating to general anaesthesia for Caesarean section. Due to it’s length we have split this discussion into two parts – who would have thought we could talk for so long about this! (I th…
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095 General anaesthesia for C Section part 1
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35:03Welcome to this podcast, the sixth in our series of obstetric anaesthesia basics. Join us for this the first part of a conversation where we discuss all things relating to general anaesthesia for Caesarean section. Due to it's length we have split this discussion into two parts - who would have thought we could talk for so long about this! (I thoug…
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094 Eclampsia, pre-eclampsia and hypertensive disorders in pregnancy
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35:27Welcome to this podcast, the fifth in our series of obstetric anaesthesia basics. Join us for this conversation where we discuss eclampsia, pre-eclampsia, hypertensive disorders and the specific issues relating to provision of obstetric anaesthesia.Thanks Laura, Graeme & Roger!BASICS OF OBSTETRIC ANAESTHESIAThe “Basics of Obstetric Anaesthesia” is …
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Welcome to this podcast, the four in our series of obstetric anaesthesia basics. Join us for this conversation where we discuss the approach to a woman with a suspected or known post dural puncture headache. This follows our previous discussion of the incidence, significance and management of accidental dural punctures & intrathecal catheters, whic…
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092 – Accidental dural puncture and intrathecal catheters
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24:51Welcome to this podcast, the third in our series of obstetric anaesthesia basics. Join us for this conversation where we discuss the incidence, significance and management of accidental dural punctures & intrathecal catheters.Thanks Laura, Matt & Roger!BASICS OF OBSTETRIC ANAESTHESIA The "Basics of Obstetric Anaesthesia" is a short series of podcas…
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