Literature DB >> 15935646

"Ultra-light" patient-controlled epidural analgesia during labor: effects of varying regimens on analgesia and physician workload.

B Carvalho1, S E Cohen, K Giarrusso, M Durbin, E T Riley, S Lipman.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Patient-controlled epidural analgesia (PCEA) offers many advantages over continuous epidural infusions for maintenance of labor analgesia. Some of these benefits may depend on the PCEA settings. This study evaluated several regimens for "ultra-light" (0.125%) PCEA with basal continuous infusion (CI) in labor with goals of minimizing physician interventions while providing good analgesia.
METHODS: Two hundred and twenty ASA I-II women receiving epidural analgesia during active labor (cervical dilation <5 cm) were randomly assigned in a double-blind manner to four treatment groups (n=30 in each). Analgesia was maintained with a PCEA/CI pump using bupivacaine 0.0625% + sufentanil 0.35 microg/mL. PCEA settings were: group A: CI 10 mL/h, PCEA bolus 6 mL, 8-min lockout; group B: CI 10 mL/h, PCEA bolus 12 mL, 16-min lockout; group C: CI 15 mL/h, PCEA bolus 6 mL, 8-min lockout; group D: CI 15 mL/h, PCEA bolus 12 mL, 16-min lockout.
RESULTS: In groups A, B, C and D, 76, 77, 75 and 85% of parturients respectively, required no physician rescue boluses. Pain scores were low and maternal satisfaction was high in all groups, with minimal differences among them. Spontaneous vaginal delivery occurred in 78% of patients overall, instrumental (forceps or vacuum) delivery in 10% and cesarean section in 12%.
CONCLUSIONS: These ultra-light PCEA regimens provided excellent analgesia with minimal physician workload and a high spontaneous delivery rate. Use of moderate to high-volume, ultra-light PCEA/CI techniques should facilitate provision of labor analgesia in busy obstetric units.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15935646     DOI: 10.1016/j.ijoa.2005.02.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Obstet Anesth        ISSN: 0959-289X            Impact factor:   2.603


  2 in total

1.  A retrospective comparative provider workload analysis for femoral nerve and adductor canal catheters following knee arthroplasty.

Authors:  Michael Rasmussen; Eugenia Kim; T Edward Kim; Steven K Howard; Seshadri Mudumbai; Nicholas J Giori; Steven Woolson; Toni Ganaway; Edward R Mariano
Journal:  J Anesth       Date:  2014-09-13       Impact factor: 2.078

2.  Report on Implementation, Use, and Sustainability of a Labor Epidural Service in Georgetown, Guyana.

Authors:  Sara L Zettervall; Andrew Amata; Jeffery S Berger; Paul Dangerfield; Ruth Derkenne; Ramon Go; Deborah Jeon; Kiera Murphy; Molly Phillips; Marian Sherman; Khashayar Vaziri
Journal:  J Educ Perioper Med       Date:  2018-07-01
  2 in total

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