Are you a Health Professional? Jump over to the doctors only platform. Click Here

Anaesthesia not harmful for babies during birth process

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Mayo Clinic researchers have found that children exposed to anaesthesia during Caesarean section are not at any higher risk for learning disabilities later in life than children not delivered by C-section. These findings are reported in the current issue of the journal Anesthesiology.

"We found that the incidence of learning disabilities was equal between children who were delivered vaginally and those who were delivered via C-section but with general anaesthesia," says Juraj Sprung, MD, PhD, a Mayo Clinic anaesthesiologist who led the study. "It’s reassuring that the anaesthetics required for Caesarean delivery do not appear to cause long-term brain problems."

The study was conducted with data from the Rochester Epidemiology Project. Researchers analysed the medical records of 5,320 children born between 1976 and 1982 to mothers living in Olmsted County. They compared birth records with scholastic achievement and IQ tests administered to the children later in life as part of their schooling.

The study builds on a previous project, reported in March, which found that children exposed to a single dose of anaesthesia during the first three years of life had no increased risk for learning disabilities, but those exposed multiple times had an almost doubled risk for later identification of learning disabilities.

Prolonged exposure to anaesthetics has been shown to cause brain abnormalities in young animals, which was the impetus behind these two studies. Scientists think that the brains of young animals and humans are more vulnerable to a variety of problems because they are undergoing rapid growth. The brain is forming vital connections between cells during this time.

Not only did the researchers find that the use of anaesthesia during delivery was not harmful to the baby, they found that babies delivered by Caesarean using an epidural anaesthetic (which numbs only the lower region of the body and does not involve the mother going to sleep) had a substantially reduced risk for learning disabilities later in life. "The risk was reduced by about 40 percent compared to children delivered vaginally and those delivered via Caesarean section but with general anaesthesia," says Dr Sprung.

Study co-author and Mayo Clinic anaesthesiologist Randall Flick, MD, cautions that because this study is preliminary, changes to medical practice should not be considered at this point. "What we’ve found is an association between two things," says Dr Flick. "One is the way a child was delivered, either vaginally or under regional or general anaesthesia. The other is a difference in the incidence of learning disabilities as the child attended school. It’s important to recognise there may be many other factors that impact learning disabilities."


The team is investigating whether use of an epidural on a mother during natural labour has similar effects on the incidence of learning disabilities in children as a C-section with an epidural.

Dr Flick says the research team also is working with the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on a related study that looks more closely at young children with specific medical conditions who have been exposed to anaesthesia and compares them to children with similar medical conditions who were not exposed to anaesthesia. The study is part of a national SAFEKIDS Initiative that the FDA is undertaking with several academic and clinical institutions to study the effects of anaesthetics and sedatives on brain development in infants and young children.

Funding for this study was provided in part by the Mayo Clinic Center for Translational Science Activities (CTSA). The Mayo Clinic CTSA is part of a national consortium working to improve how biomedical research is conducted across the nation. The consortium, funded through Clinical and Translational Science Awards, shares a common vision to accelerate the time it takes for laboratory discoveries to become treatments for patients and to engage communities in clinical and translational science. It is also fulfilling the critical need to train the next generation of clinical researchers. The CTSA initiative is led by the National Center for Research Resources at the National Institutes of Health.

Additional co-authors include Robert Wilder, MD, PhD; Slavica Katusic, MD; Tasha Pike; Mariella Dingli, MD; Darrell Schroeder; William Barbaresi, MD; Andrew Hanson; and David Warner, MD. Another co-author is Stephen Gleich, MD, of the Primary Children’s Medical Center, Salt Lake City.

(Source: Mayo Clinic: Anesthesiology: August 2009)


Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Dates

Posted On: 4 August, 2009
Modified On: 28 August, 2014

Tags



Created by: myVMC