Abstract
Sixty ASA grade 1 or 2 patients, aged 60 years or over, scheduled for surgery to the lower abdomen or lower limbs under spinal anaesthesia were allocated randomly to one of three treatment groups. Group A received 16 ml/kg of Ringer's acetate solution immediately before spinal anaesthesia, group B received 8 ml/kg and group C received no volume preload. Heart rate, arterial pressure and anaesthetic level were recorded by an independent observer. The overall incidence of systemic arterial hypotension (defined as a decrease of 25% or more in systolic arterial pressure) was 27%; there were no significant differences among groups. The overall incidence of hypotension was 60%, when temperature sensation was blocked to T7 and above (n = 25). The number of patients with hypotension which required treatment increased as block height increased above T7; at a level of T4 or higher, all patients required ephedrine. Crystalloid preloading had no effect on the incidence of hypotension after spinal anaesthesia in fit, elderly patients.