Labor Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Programmed Intermittent Epidural Bolus for Labor Analgesia During First Stage of Labor: a RCT Comparing 125 mL/h Versus 250 mL/h Bolus Delivery Flow
At Mount Sinai Hospital, epidural analgesia for labor pain is delivered by programmed
intermittent epidural bolus (PIEB), in combination with pushes of medication activated by the
patient, a technique called patient controlled epidural analgesia (PCEA). Studies have shown
that delivering analgesia in this manner can prolong the duration of analgesia, diminish
motor block, lower the incidence of breakthrough pain, improve maternal satisfaction and
decrease local anesthetic consumption comparing to a conventional continuous infusion. The
use of this PIEB technique in routine practice has reduced the total consumption of local
anesthetic and the percentage of patients requesting additional boluses (PCEA or manual
rescues).
However, at the same time, sensory blocks above those targeted for labor pain relief have
been reported in our institution, suggesting that the spread of the freezing medication is
wider than necessary. Based on the information already available in the literature, the
investigators will conduct this study to determine the best regimen of PIEB achievable with a
slower delivery speed.
The hypothesis of this study is that PIEB boluses with 125 mL/h will decrease by 50% the
incidence of women presenting sensory block to ice equal or higher than T6 as compared to a
delivery rate of 250 mL/h.
PIEB is a novel technique, which provides better analgesia and less motor block; however, the
ideal regimen has not been established. To optimize the PIEB regimen, the investigators have
conducted several clinical trials using bupivacaine with fentanyl. Although PIEB provides the
excellent analgesia to laboring parturients, studies completed by the instigators have shown
that the incidence of sensory block to ice ≥T6 was 66%. For labor analgesia during the first
stage of labor, effective sensory block requires T10 to L1; therefore, a sensory block ≥T6
seems unnecessarily high, and the investigators seek to confine epidural spread within a
proper range.
Our previous studies showed that the effective volume 90% using 0.0625% bupivacaine was 10.7
mL, and incidence of epidural blockade ≥T6 was similar even using a 5-mL bolus with 0.125%
bupivacaine. The investigators concluded that it is not possible to reduce volume of the
PIEB, or use a higher concentration of local anesthetic without compromising the quality of
analgesia. There is some evidence in the literature that supports the idea that higher
injection pressures result in a wider spread of local anesthetic administered into the
epidural space, therefore a slower epidural delivery flow rate may result in less spread.
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