Prenatal Alcohol Exposure, Anesthesia, and Fetal Loss in Baboon Model of Pregnancy

Kelsey C. North, A. Tobiasz, Ryan D. Sullivan, Z. Bursac, J. Duncan, J. P. Sullivan, Steven Davison, D. Tate, Stacey Barnett, G. Mari, A. Bukiya
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Approximately half of pregnant women engage in alcohol consumption some time during pregnancy. On the other hand, a small percentage of pregnant women undergo surgery and anesthesia at some time during pregnancy. In emergencies, anesthesia has to be administered to patients who are under alcohol intoxication. Anesthetic management during pregnancy while patients are intoxicated with alcohol is challenging. Here, we utilized a retrospective analysis of data available from 17 pregnant baboons that underwent anesthesia with alcohol exposure during mid-pregnancy. The analysis was designed to answer three questions: whether maternal vital signs remained stable under anesthesia combined with alcohol, whether maternal vital signs that were routinely monitored under anesthesia could serve as predictor(s) of fetal loss, and what the impact of the combined application of anesthesia and alcohol was on fetal loss. For the purpose of this retrospective analysis, we utilized vital sign (heart and respiratory rates, temperature, oxygen, carbon dioxide, systolic and diastolic blood pressure) and pregnancy outcome (miscarriage versus fetal survival through second trimester-equivalent of human pregnancy) records from 17 pregnant baboons that underwent gastric infusion of either control or alcohol-containing drink under isoflurane anesthesia during the second trimester-equivalent of human pregnancy. Half of the dams underwent a brief prior anesthetic episode for the purpose of gestational age confirmation. Thus, in our analysis, baboons were divided into four groups: “Control” without prior anesthesia, “Control” with prior anesthesia, “Alcohol” without prior anesthesia, and “Alcohol” with prior anesthesia. We did not detect any maternal vital sign in any of the groups that would be predictive of a fetal loss. However, prior anesthesia predisposed dams to the risk of lowering maternal systolic blood pressure and to a significant decrease in maternal oxygen level during the combined application of anesthesia and alcohol. Conceivably, our data showed the largest fetal loss in this group. The disruptive nature of anesthesia and alcohol on maternal vital parameters warns against the use of anesthesia in combination with alcohol during pregnancy.
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产前酒精暴露、麻醉和狒狒妊娠模型的胎儿丢失
大约一半的孕妇在怀孕期间会饮酒。另一方面,一小部分孕妇在怀孕期间接受手术和麻醉。在紧急情况下,必须对酒精中毒的病人实施麻醉。怀孕期间的麻醉管理,而患者醉酒是具有挑战性的。在这里,我们对17只怀孕狒狒的数据进行了回顾性分析,这些狒狒在怀孕中期接受了酒精麻醉。分析旨在回答三个问题:麻醉联合酒精下产妇生命体征是否保持稳定;麻醉下常规监测的产妇生命体征是否可以作为胎儿丢失的预测指标;麻醉和酒精联合应用对胎儿丢失的影响。为了进行回顾性分析,我们利用了17只怀孕狒狒的生命体征(心脏和呼吸频率、体温、氧气、二氧化碳、收缩压和舒张压)和妊娠结局(流产与妊娠中期胎儿存活率的对比)记录,这些狒狒在妊娠中期(相当于人类妊娠)在异氟醚麻醉下接受了对照或含酒精饮料的胃输注。为了确认胎龄,一半的母鼠接受了短暂的麻醉。因此,在我们的分析中,狒狒被分为四组:没有事先麻醉的“对照组”、事先麻醉的“对照组”、没有事先麻醉的“酒精组”和事先麻醉的“酒精组”。在任何一组中,我们都没有发现任何母体生命体征可以预测胎儿的损失。然而,在麻醉和酒精联合应用期间,先前的麻醉易导致产妇收缩压降低和产妇氧水平显著降低的风险。可想而知,我们的数据显示,这组胎儿损失最大。麻醉和酒精对产妇生命参数的破坏性质警告怀孕期间不要将麻醉与酒精结合使用。
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来源期刊
Journal of Drug and Alcohol Research
Journal of Drug and Alcohol Research Psychology-Clinical Psychology
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0.50
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期刊介绍: The Journal of Drug and Alcohol Research (JDAR) is a scholarly open access, peer-reviewed, and fully refereed journal dedicated to publishing sound papers on advances in the field of drug, opiate, nicotine and alcohol abuse, both basic and clinical. The journal will consider papers from all sub-disciplines and aspects of drug abuse, dependence and addiction research. Manuscripts will be published online as soon as they are accepted, which will reduce the time of publication. Because there are no space limitations or favored topics, all papers, within the scope of the journal, judged to be sound by the reviewers, will be published.
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