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Query: UMLS:C0344307 (analgesia)
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A disciplined approach to labor management has resulted in a low cesarean rate (9%) in our population. We wondered if this management scheme was applicable and safe applied to women with previous cesareans. Women with a previous cesarean delivering in a 5-year period were included. Labor management included encouragement of trial of labor, labor stimulation with oxytocin when indicated, epidural analgesia only after entering the active phase, and continuous monitoring. Demographic, labor and delivery, and neonatal data were electronically stored and analysis performed using SPSS release 4.1 for VAX/VMS. Statistical analysis was performed using chi-square and Fisher's exact test where appropriate. Multiple logistic regression was performed to control for potentially confounding variables. A previous cesarean had been performed in 713 (11%) gravidas who met the inclusion criteria. Vaginal delivery was attempted in 588 (82%) and 517 (88%) achieved vaginal birth. Older women (14 versus 1 versus 8%, p = 0.04), of higher parity (63 versus 35 versus 17%, p = 0.0001), requiring preterm delivery (14 versus 8 versus 4%) were more likely to have an elective repeat cesarean than a successful or failed trial of labor. Pregnancies requiring oxytocin (90 versus 53%, p = 0.02), receiving epidural analgesia (62 versus 49%, p = 0.05), developing chorioamnionitis (20 versus 4%, p < 0.0001) were more likely to fail a trial of labor. Four uterine ruptures occurred and only one patient was receiving oxytocin. There were no differences in umbilical artery blood acidemia among elective repeat cesarean sections and successful or failed trial of labor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Trial of labor: a disciplined approach to labor management resulting in a high rate of vaginal delivery. 761 91

The use of warm water immersion (WI) by women for relaxation during labor is being used around the world; however, there is little available research as to the effects of WI. We conducted this prospective, randomized, and controlled study to determine the safety and effect of WI on the woman in labor. We studied 93 subjects between 36 and 41 weeks' gestation, in active labor, with intact membranes, and without major medical or obstetric complications. Subjects in the WI group utilized a tub in labor along with other pain relief measures such as ambulation, rest, showers, and analgesics. Subjects in the no-WI group could use all available methods of pain relief except WI. Water immersion did not alter the rate of cervical dilation, change the contraction pattern, change the length of labor, or alter the use of analgesia. The rates of chorioamnionitis and endometritis were not altered by WI. Although we did not demonstrate an improvement in progression of labor by WI, there was no evidence of increased maternal, neonatal, or infectious morbidity.
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PMID:Water immersion and the effect on labor. 829 16

To determine whether women who receive continuous epidural analgesia for labor and delivery are more likely to receive antibiotic therapy compared to those parturients who do not use epidural analgesia, a chart review was performed for 300 women 100 in each group using narcotics alone epidural alone, or parenteral narcotics followed by epidural analgesia. While only 2% of women with narcotics alone developed an intrapartum temperature > or = 37.8 degrees C, 16% and 24% of women with epidural use alone or in addition to narcotics did so, respectively. Antibiotic administration was increased among women utilizing epidural analgesia, exclusively or following parenteral narcotics. No parturient with culture or pathological evidence of chorioamnionitis had maternal temperature elevation as an isolated finding. A probable causal relationship between maternal temperature elevation and epidural use in labor is supported. Rather than treating all women with temperature elevations and epidurals for presumed chorioamnionitis, it is reasonable to target treatment to those with fetal tachycardia, meconium stained fluid, or abnormal amniotic fluid studies.
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PMID:Increased intrapartum antibiotic administration associated with epidural analgesia in labor. 925 4

We performed a prospective randomized study to compare maternal and fetal outcomes in pregnancies with prelabour rupture of the membranes (PROM) at term with early induction of labour or expectant management, 126 women with singleton pregnancy, cephalic presentation and gestational duration > or = 37 weeks, were randomized either to immediate induction of labour with oxytocin (Group 1) (n=52), or conservative management (Group 2) (n=74). Women who constituted Group 2 were divided into 2 groups. The first group (Group 2A) (n=25) included women in whom spontaneous labour did not begin after a waiting period of 24 hours, in which case labour was induced with oxytocin i.e. expectant management. The second group consisted of women (Group 2B) (n=49) in whom labour began spontaneously within 24 hours. The base Caesarean section rate was significantly higher in Group 2 (28.4%) (p<0.05). The rates of Caesarean section in the Groups 1-2A-2B were 19.2%, 60%, and 12.2%, respectively for nulliparous and parous women together. The rate of fetal distress was significantly higher in Group 2 (p<0.05). For determining maternal outcomes, the other parameters such as clinical chorioamnionitis, fever before or during labour, receiving antibiotics before or during labour, postpartum fever, analgesia, anaesthesia did not differ in Groups 1 and 2. Women in Group 1 went into active labour sooner, had fewer digital vaginal examinations, had a shorter interval between membrane rupture and delivery, and spent less time in the hospital before delivery than those in Group 2 (p<0.05). Babies in Group 2 were more likely to receive antibiotics, and more likely to stay in an intensive care nursery for more than 24 hours, and more likely to receive ventilation after initial resuscitation than those babies in Group 1. For developing apnoea and hypotonia, there was no significant difference between Groups 1 and 2. However, for babies in Group 2A there was a significant difference. We conclude that immediate induction of labour with oxytocin does not increase the risk of Caesarean section, compared with a practice of expectant management. Women at term with prelabour rupture of the membranes should therefore be reassured that immediate induction with oxytocin currently appears to be the best policy with respect to maternal and neonatal morbidity.
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PMID:Prelabour rupture of the membranes at term--no advantage of delaying induction for 24 hours. 1055 36

Premature rupture of membranes (PROM) occurs in 8% of term deliveries. In this situation labour induction with prostaglandins, compared with expectant management, results in a reduced risk of chorioamnionitis, neonatal antibiotic therapy, neonatal intensive care (NICU) admission, and increased maternal satisfaction. The use of prostaglandin is associated with an increased rate of diarrhoea and use of analgesia/anaesthesia. Compared with oxytocin, prostaglandin induction results in a lower rate of epidural use and internal fetal heart rate monitoring but a greater risk of chorioamnionitis, nausea, vomiting, more vaginal examinations, neonatal antibiotic therapy, NICU admission and neonatal infection. Women should be informed of the risks and benefits of each method of induction.Misoprostol is gaining increasing interest as an alternative induction agent. It appears to be an effective method of labour induction with term PROM. Further research is needed to identify the preferred dosage, route and interval of administration, and to assess uncommon maternal and neonatal outcomes. There has been limited research on the use of prostaglandins, including misoprostol, for induction of labour with a favourable cervix and intact membranes. Compared with intravenous oxytocin (with and without amniotomy), labour induction using vaginal prostaglandins in women with a favourable cervix (with and without PROM) results in a higher rate of vaginal delivery within 24 hours and increased maternal satisfaction. In women with a favourable cervix, artificial rupture of membranes followed by oral misoprostol has similar time to vaginal delivery compared with artificial rupture of membranes followed by oxytocin. Further research with prostaglandins, including misoprostol, is needed to evaluate other maternal and neonatal outcomes in women being induced with a favourable cervix. No form of prostaglandin induction in women with PROM or favourable cervix has proven clearly superior to oxytocin infusion.
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PMID:Induction of labour with a favourable cervix and/or pre-labour rupture of membranes. 1297 15

Three women in labor for whom epidural analgesia was contraindicated--2 with sepsis (pylonephritis and chorioamnionitis) and 1 with sacral agenesia--were provided intravenous analgesia with propofol (0.4-1.2 mg/kg/h) and remifentanil (0.033-0.1 microgram/kg/min plus boluses of 20 micrograms controlled by the patient) with oxygen supplementation. Heart rate, noninvasive blood pressure, maternal oxygen saturation and fetal heart rate were monitored. Maternal satisfaction, quality of analgesia, maternal side effects (sedation, depression, breathing, muscle rigidity, nausea, and vomiting) and fetal side effects (heart rate variability and Apgar score) were evaluated. We conclude that in cases where epidural analgesia is contraindicated, intravenous perfusion of low doses of propofol and remifentanil can provide a valid alternative for analgesia during labor.
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PMID:[3 cases of sedation and analgesia using propofol and remifentanil for labor]. 1460 71

Maternal intra-partum fever commonly complicates the process of labour. Its occurrence is often regarded as being synonymous with the presence of chorioamnionitis. This inevitably results in the administration of antibiotics to the affected mother. Review of the literature however suggests that this approach is not always appropriate. Non-infective causes of this condition that are often overlooked include the use of epidural analgesia for pain relief, normal thermal physiological changes in women not using any form of analgesia and delivery in an overheated room. Women with certain risk factors such as nulliparity and a long latent phase of labour are also more prone to developing maternal intra-partum fever. Irrespective of its aetiology, maternal intra-partum fever carries risks both for the mother and her unborn child. Putting more thought into the care of these patients will go a long way in reducing the maternal and neonatal morbidity associated with this complication.
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PMID:Maternal intra-partum fever. 1736 50

The safety of neuraxial analgesia in febrile patients is controversial. We performed an evidenced-based project in an effort to establish a guideline for our active obstetric clinical practice. Neuraxial anesthesia is generally safe for parturients, and complications are rare; however, serious adverse outcomes can result. Because of the devastating nature of the morbidity, the decision to proceed with a neuraxial anesthetic in the face of infection may be contentious. Fever and sepsis are considered relative contraindications to regional anesthesia; however, epidural anesthesia is a superior method of management of pain during labor. One must also consider that 30% to 40% of patients with chorioamnionitis require cesarean delivery. Because of the increased morbidity and mortality of general anesthesia in this population, it may be reasonable to proceed with regional anesthesia. Based on a review of the literature, it is difficult to estimate the risk of an infrequently occurring event. We recommend evaluation of each individual to determine the risks and benefits of the anesthetic. However, it is prudent to administer antibiotics before the regional anesthetic and adhere to strict aseptic technique. Postprocedure monitoring is essential for early detection and treatment of complications.
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PMID:Evidence-based anesthesia: fever of unknown origin in parturients and neuraxial anesthesia. 1856 28

For parturients desiring labor analgesia who have contraindications to neuraxial techniques, intravenous opioid-based patient-controlled analgesia (IVPCA) offers a reasonable alternative, although incomplete analgesia and maternal and neonatal respiratory depression can occur. Dexmedetomidine, a highly selective alpha(2) agonist with negligible placental transfer, may be a valuable adjunct to IVPCA by providing additional analgesia without the respiratory depression associated with increasing opioid usage. The successful use of a dexmedetomidine infusion as an adjunct to unsatisfactory fentanyl IVPCA is reported in a 31-year-old parturient with spina bifida occulta and a tethered spinal cord reaching L5-S1. Dexmedetomidine significantly improved the analgesic quality; increased sedation was observed, but the patient was easily rousable to verbal stimuli. No episodes of maternal hypotension or bradycardia, or fetal heart rate irregularities occurred. Cesarean delivery was required for prolonged first stage of labor and presumed chorioamnionitis; it was conducted under general anesthesia during which the dexmedetomidine infusion was continued. A healthy baby boy was delivered with normal Apgar scores and no discernible neurobehavioral or other deficits.
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PMID:Intravenous dexmedetomidine as an adjunct for labor analgesia and cesarean delivery anesthesia in a parturient with a tethered spinal cord. 1946 77

Women in labor who receive epidural analgesia are more likely to experience hyperthermia and overt clinical fever. The gradual development of modest hyperthermia observed in laboring women with epidural analgesia is not seen in those electing other forms of analgesia or unmedicated labor. Clinical fever is also far more likely in women laboring with epidural analgesia. It is possible that the observed slow increase in mean temperature is an artifact of averaging the temperature curves of a small group of women who eventually develop fever with a larger group who remain afebrile throughout labor. Selection bias confounds the association between epidural analgesia and fever, because women at risk for fever-due to longer duration of ruptured membranes, longer labor, more frequent cervical examinations, and other interventions-are also more likely to select epidural analgesia. However, even randomized trials have confirmed a higher incidence of fever in epidural-exposed women, suggesting a causal relationship. The mechanisms of epidural-associated fever remain incompletely understood. Altered thermoregulation and an antipyretic effect of opioids given to women without epidural analgesia may explain part of the phenomenon, but the most likely etiology is inflammation, most commonly in the placenta and membranes (chorioamnionitis). The consequences of maternal fever are diverse. Obstetricians are more likely to intervene surgically in laboring women with fever, and neonatologists are more likely to evaluate neonates of febrile women for sepsis. More ominously, maternal inflammatory fever is associated with neonatal brain injury, manifest as cerebral palsy, encephalopathy, and learning deficits in later childhood. At present, there are no safe and effective means to inhibit epidural-associated fever. Future research should define the etiology of this fever and search for safe and effective interventions to prevent it and to inhibit its potential adverse effects on the neonatal brain.
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PMID:Labor epidural analgesia and maternal fever. 2086 20


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