Other than c-sections, I haven't done any open (or laparoscopic) abdominal surgery under spinal. I think that's for a reason, a lot of the visceral sensation that comes with uterine manipulation is unavoidable, even with worlds best spinal. Even with a T4 or T5 level they would probably feel uterine manipulation. I presume incision was fine. What level did you get when you checked the block?
My OB experience was in two parts, our big academic medical center, and a private hospital. At the academic hospital they always externalized the unterus with c-sections, and sure enough almost every patient got sick and/or felt significant discomfort. At the private hospital virtually no one externalized the uterus, and sure enough a lot fewer patients got sick. But some still did.
Spinals in abdominal surgery are really to be avoid, I think. OB is an exception, mom sees baby, mom and dad chat, everyone is happy most of the time. (Don't fear the GA c-section) The other exception is medically underserved countries, where spinals are a lot cheaper than GA. They require less drugs, less monitoring, etc. Then its a resource issue.
Its a nice idea to avoid tubing a patient with asthma, but the case you presented I would argue she has risk factors that would make me want to secure the airway up front (GERD, OSA, obesity), rather than after the spinal wears off while they're calling urology to fix the ureter.
😀
How did her airway look, if MP 3 and no chin, all the more reason to secure her airway upfront.