Placental transfer of lidocaine hydrochloride after prolonged continuous maternal intravenous administration

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Abstract

We treated a patient with arrhythmia during pregnancy with prolonged intravenous administration of lidocaine hydrochloride. This was a case of twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome and the arrhythmia was caused by ritodrine therapy. In total, 14.1 g lidocaine (50 mg · hr-1 for 282 hr) were used. Since there are no descriptions of human placental transfer of lidocaine after such a prolonged continuous intravenous administration, we measured lidocaine concentrations in maternal and fetal serum, and in the amniotic fluid (AF) at delivery. Fetal serum lidocaine concentrations (donor: 0.83 μg · ml-1; recipient: 0.82 μg · ml-1) were lower than in the maternal serum (1.6 μg · ml-1), while the AF lidocaine concentrations (donor: 1.05 μg · ml-1; recipient: 1.04 μg · ml-1) were higher than those of the fetal sera. The fetal/maternal concentration ratios of lidocaine were 0.52 for the donor and 0.51 for the recipient, which were similar to those described previously after administration of lidocaine in labour. © 1995 Canadian Anesthesiologists.

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Banzai, M., Sato, S., Tezuka, N., Komiya, H., Chimura, T., & Hiroi, M. (1995). Placental transfer of lidocaine hydrochloride after prolonged continuous maternal intravenous administration. Canadian Journal of Anaesthesia, 42(4), 338–340. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF03010711

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