Clinical Trials Logo

Labor Epidural Analgesia clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Labor Epidural Analgesia.

Filter by:
  • None
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT06403982 Enrolling by invitation - Labor Pain Clinical Trials

The Influence of Oxytocin on Intrapartum Fetal Well-being and Delivery Outcomes in Patients Receiving Epidural Analgesia

Start date: May 6, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this study is to determine the influence of oxytocin on fetal well-being during labor in patients receiving epidural analgesia (ELA) with the use of cardiotocography (CTG) and doppler ultrasonography. CTG is a commonly used technique to monitor the fetal heartbeat and contractions of uterus during pregnancy and labor. The maternal-fetal doppler ultrasonography is a non-invasive method used for the pregnancy surveillance. Various psychological and psychosocial factors impact the perception of labor pain. Its intensity is described differently by each patient - some claim it to be the worst pain that they experienced during their lives. Usually, the labor pain is more severely experienced by the patients giving birth for the first time and those with induced labor. Nowadays, there are many non-pharmacological (e.g. acupuncture, massage, TENS) and pharmacological (anesthetic gas, opioids, ELA) methods of labor pain management. ELA is a regional anesthesia, in which the anesthetic drug is injected into the epidural space with the aim to block the pain experienced by the patient without impacting patients ability to move or push during labor. The safety of the procedure is well-discussed and documented in Cochrane review from 2018, which shows no adverse impact on the proportions of Caesarean section, long-term backache, or neonatal outcomes. It is considered to be a golden standard for labor pain management. Oxytocin is a well-known hormone used for the induction of labor and to stimulate the uterine contraction during labor. The impact of oxytocin alone on CTG pattern and maternal-fetal doppler ultrasonography is discussed in the literature. However, the cumulative effect of ELA and oxytocin remains unclear. Some researchers claim that ELA increases the frequency of uterine contractions and that the additional use of oxytocin leads to higher risk of uterine hyper-stimulation and unreassuring CTG patterns. Whereas the others state that ELA weakens the strength of uterine contractions leading to slow progression of labor and the need to use or increase the use of oxytocin. There are no data on how the cumulative use of oxytocin and ELA impacts the maternal-fetal flows during labor.

NCT ID: NCT03839056 Completed - Clinical trials for Labor Epidural Analgesia

Comparative Study of the Combination of Different Modes of Administration of Local Anesthetics in Labor Analgesia

Start date: August 2, 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The investigators have design an observational study to know the anesthetic consumption in terms of rescue analgesia (Patient Controlled Epidural Analgesia (PCEA) and manual boluses) of the combination of different modes of administration of local anesthetic in the epidural space during labor analgesia offered by the new version of the CADD® infusion pump. Also in this pump the anesthetic can be administered across a system of standard flow (40-250ml/h) or of high flow (40-500ml/h), what according to studies can influence the diffusion epidural of the anesthetic and therefore the level of sensitive blockade.

NCT ID: NCT02768272 Completed - Clinical trials for Labor Epidural Analgesia

PIEB vs PCEA With Epidural or CSE Technique. A Randomized Double Blind Clinical Trial

PIEB-CT
Start date: March 1, 2016
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The investigators have design a randomized double blind clinical trial to know the incidence of breaktrough pain (BP) in high-risk of BP parturients (nulliparous with early cervical dilation) comparing two epidural analgesic regimes: programed intermittent epidural boluses versus patient controlled epidural analgesia. The role of the epidural technique (epidural versus combined spinal-epidural) in the incidence of BP will be also evaluated.