Anesthesia & Analgesia, Vol 85, 82-86, Copyright © 1997 by International Anesthesia Research Society
The effect of anesthetic techniques on blood coagulability in parturients as measured by thromboelastography
SK Sharma and J Philip
Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Management, University of Texas Southwestern Medical School, Dallas 75235-9068, USA.
Anesthetic techniques may affect blood coagulability and the subsequent
incidence of thromboembolic events. The purpose of this study was to
evaluate the effect of spinal and general anesthesia on blood coagulability
in normal pregnant women undergoing cesarean section, using
thromboelastography. In the spinal anesthesia group (n = 15),
thromboelastography was performed after crystalloid preloading and during
the immediate postanesthesia course. In the general anesthesia group (n =
15), thromboelastography was performed before induction and during the
immediate postanesthesia course. Values for all thromboelastographic
variables (reaction time [r], clot formation time [K], coagulation time
[rK], maximum amplitude [MA], elastic shear modulus [G], clot formation
rate [alpha angle], and coagulation index [CI]) in the preanesthesia period
were similar in both the spinal and general anesthesia groups. However, in
the postanesthesia period, r and K significantly decreased (P < 0.05),
and alpha angle (P < 0.05) and CI significantly increased (P < 0.01)
in the general anesthesia group when compared with the spinal anesthesia
group. In the postanesthesia period, MA and G were similar in both groups.
In the spinal anesthesia group, thromboelastographic variables did not
change significantly in the postanesthesia compared with the preanesthesia
period. We conclude that the use of general anesthesia for cesarean section
is associated with accelerated coagulability when compared with spinal
anesthesia.