Timing Matters: An Observational Study on Circadian Effects of Spinal Anesthesia in Cesarean Delivery
Evangelia Nikouli, Nikoleta Koutlaki, Kostas Anagnostopoulos, Soultania Anna Toubalidou, Christina Tsigalou, Pelagia Chloropoulou

TL;DR
This study shows that the time of day spinal anesthesia is given during cesarean delivery affects how long it works, pain levels, and stress response.
Contribution
The study introduces CRP velocity as a novel metric to assess the rate of physiological stress response after surgery.
Findings
Spinal anesthesia given at night (Group C) resulted in shorter block duration and higher pain scores.
CRP levels and velocity were highest in the evening group (Group B), indicating a faster stress response.
Timing of anesthesia significantly influences postoperative outcomes and inflammation dynamics.
Abstract
Background: The timing of anesthesia administration may affect drug efficacy and recovery outcomes. Understanding these variations is important for optimizing anesthetic care. Aim: To assess how spinal anesthesia timing affects block duration, postoperative pain, and CRP and cortisol levels in cesarean deliveries. Methods: Ninety women were divided into three groups based on spinal anesthesia timing: Group A (08:00–16:00), Group B (16:00–00:00), and Group C (00:00–08:00). Standardized spinal anesthesia was administered. Sensory/motor blockade and pain (NRS) were assessed every 10 min. Blood samples for CRP and cortisol were collected preoperatively and at 2, 4, 24, and 48 h post operation. Results: Group C showed shorter sensory and motor blockade than Groups A and B (p < 0.05). The time to first analgesic request was longest in Group A, while Group C reported the highest pain scores (p…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnesthesia and Pain Management · Enhanced Recovery After Surgery · Pediatric Pain Management Techniques
