๐ Spinal anaesthesia for patients with coronavirus disease 2019 and possible transmission rates in anaesthetists: retrospective, single-centre, observational cohort study.
BACKGROUND: The safety of performing spinal anaesthesia for both patients and anaesthetists alike in the presence of active infection with the novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is unclear. Here, we report the clinical characteristics and outcomes for both patients with COVID-19 and the anaesthetists who provided their spinal anaesthesia. METHODS: Forty-nine patients with radiologically confirmed COVID-19 for Caesarean section or lower-limb surgery undergoing spinal anaesthesia in Zhongnan Hospital, Wuhan, China participated in this retrospective study. Clinical characteristics and perioperative outcomes were recorded. For anaesthesiologists exposed to patients with COVID-19 by providing spinal anaesthesia, the level of personal protective equipment (PPE) used, clinical outcomes (pulmonary CT scans), and confirmed COVID-19 transmission rates (polymerase chain reaction [PCR]) were reviewed. RESULTS: Forty-nine patients with COVID-19 requiring supplementary oxygen before surgery had spinal anaesthesia (ropivacaine 0.75%), chiefly for Caesarean section (45/49 [91%]). Spinal anaesthesia was not associated with cardiorespiratory compromise intraoperatively. No patients subsequently developed severe pneumonia. Of 44 anaesthetists, 37 (84.1%) provided spinal anaesthesia using Level 3 PPE. Coronavirus disease 2019 infection was subsequently confirmed by PCR in 5/44 (11.4%) anaesthetists. One (2.7%) of 37 anaesthetists who wore Level 3 PPE developed PCR-confirmed COVID-19 compared with 4/7 (57.1%) anaesthetists who had Level 1 protection in the operating theatre (relative risk reduction: 95.3% [95% confidence intervals: 63.7-99.4]; P<0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Spinal anaesthesia was delivered safely in patients with active COVID-19 infection, the majority of whom had Caesarean sections. Level 3 PPE appears to reduce the risk of transmission to anaesthetists who are exposed to mildly symptomatic surgical patients.
keywords
๐ COVID-19 (1240)
๐ infection (3010)
๐ intra-spinal anaesthesia ()
๐ perioperative clinical characteristics ()
๐ surgery (50)
๐ personal protective (55)
๐ polymerase chain (300)
๐ novel coronavirus (684)
๐ protective equipment (57)
๐ confidence interval (64)
๐ chain reaction (303)
author
๐ค Zhong, Qi
๐ค Liu, Yin Y
๐ค Luo, Qiong
๐ค Zou, Yu F
๐ค Jiang, Hai X
๐ค Li, Hui
๐ค Zhang, Jing J
๐ค Li, Zhen
๐ค Yang, Xin
๐ค Ma, Min
๐ค Tang, Li J
๐ค Chen, Ying Y
๐ค Zheng, Feng
๐ค Ke, Jian J
๐ค Zhang, Zong Z
year
โฐ 2020
journal
๐ Br J Anaesth
issn
๐
volume
number
page
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0
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