Mayo Researchers Find Anesthesia Not Harmful For Babies During Birth Process


Mayo Clinic researchers have found that children exposed to anesthesia during Cesarean delivery are not at any higher risk for later learning disabilities than children not delivered by Cesarean. These findings are recently reported in 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 Cesarean section but with general anesthesia,” says Juraj Sprung, M.D., Ph.D., a Mayo Clinic anesthesiologist who led the study. “It’s reassuring that the anesthetics required for Cesarean delivery do not appear to cause long-term brain problems.”

Not only did the researchers find that the use of anesthesia during delivery was not harmful to the baby, they found that babies delivered by Cesarean using an epidural anesthetic (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 Cesarean section but with general anesthesia,” says Dr. Sprung.

The study was co-authored by Mayo Clinic anesthesiologist, Randall Flick, M.D.

Below is a link to an edited youtube video with Dr. Sprung and Dr. Flick.

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One Response to Mayo Researchers Find Anesthesia Not Harmful For Babies During Birth Process

  1. Pingback: Anesthesia During C-Section Does Not Cause Developmental Delays « Mommy Too! Magazine : Celebrating Black Mothers, Black Moms, African-American Moms, African-American Mothers

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