Labor Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Response Patterns to the Electrical Stimulation of Epidural Catheters With Varying Pulse Widths in Term Pregnant Women
Epidural analgesia is commonly used for labor pain relief due to its safety and
effectiveness. Despite a very high success rate, the epidural technique remains a somewhat
blind technique and failures continue to occur. Unfortunately, there are no imaging
techniques that can be used at the bedside to determine the proper positioning of the
epidural catheter. The trans-catheter electric stimulation test (TCEST) has been successfully
used for this purpose. This test is occasionally performed in situations where the immediate
confirmation of the proper epidural catheter location is deemed necessary. The test helps to
predict which epidurals might fail so that appropriate measures could be immediately
implemented.
There has been one duration of electrical stimulus (0.2 milliseconds) that has been used in
the majority of studies and in clinical practice. With this duration of stimulation, the vast
majority of cases show a unilateral motor response of the lower limbs during the TCEST.
Studies on the stimulation of peripheral nerves (nerves in the arms and legs) have shown that
an electrical stimulus with a longer duration is able to stimulate nerves which are farther
away. Since nerves in the epidural space are similar in composition to peripheral nerves, the
investigators expect to see a higher rate of bilateral response with the longer duration of
stimulus. The investigators also hope to show that this bilateral response is predictive of a
better functioning epidural.
The investigators hypothesize that the incidence of a bilateral response to the TCEST will be
higher with the 1.0 ms pulse width compared to 0.1 ms pulse width. Furthermore, the
investigators hypothesize that a bilateral motor response associated with the 1.0 ms pulse
width will be predictive of symmetry of sensory and motor block and of lower consumption of
local anesthetic.
This will be a randomized double-blind controlled study. After recruitment of the patient,
epidural anesthesia will be performed in the standard fashion employed in the investigators'
institution by a fellow or staff. Spinal ultrasound will be used prior to performing the
epidural catheter insertion. The trans-catheter electric stimulation test (TCEST) will be
performed at both a 0.1ms pulse width and a 1ms pulse width. The order in which the two pulse
widths are applied will be randomly decided by computer. The test dose of local anesthetic
will then be administered, and the TCEST will be repeated 5 minutes later. Again, both pulse
widths (0.1ms, 1ms) will be used, and the order in which they are applied will be decided
randomly.
Following the second testing, a loading dose of the standard anesthetic solution will be
administered. The sensory level to ice will be tested at 20 minutes following injection of
the loading dose of bupivacaine and fentanyl. The sensory level will be assessed from the
sacral to the thoracic levels, bilaterally. The motor response pattern will be recorded for
all TCESTs performed, and any relationship between pulse width and response pattern will be
determined.
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