The sitting position in neurosurgical anaesthesia: A survey of British practice in 1991

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Abstract

A postal survey of 160 members of the Neurosurgical Anaesthetists' Travelling Club was conducted in 1991 to investigate the current use of the sitting position in neurosurgery. There was a 78% response rate; at least one reply was received from every neurosurgical centre in the UK. Patients were placed normally in the sitting position for posterior fossa surgery in eight (20%) of the centres, compared with 19 (53%) in 1981. For posterior cervical spinal surgery, only three (7%) centres routinely used the sitting position, compared with 11(31%) in 1981. Thus in the period 1981%1991, the number of neurosurgical centres using the sitting position routinely, decreased by more than 50%. Current techniques of ventilation and monitoring for the sitting position are discussed briefly. © 1994 British Journal of Anaesthesia.

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Elton, R. J., & Howell, R. S. C. (1994). The sitting position in neurosurgical anaesthesia: A survey of British practice in 1991. British Journal of Anaesthesia, 73(2), 247–248. https://doi.org/10.1093/bja/73.2.247

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