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Clinical Trial Summary

The prevalence of perineal lacerations is more than 75% of all vaginal deliveries. The repair of such lacerations in our institution is usually done using lidocaine for non-epiduralized patients versus no local injection in patients with a pre-existing epidural analgesia. The prevalence of epidural analgesia use among women who underwent vaginal delivery in cross-sectional study of over 2 million deliveries in the United States was 71.1%. Once the analgesic effect of the epidural analgesia fades, the laceration may cause uncontrolled postpartum pain which can affect both the physical and mental recovery period, extend hospital stays, and increase the potential for serious adverse reactions with pain medications. The research hypothesis of this study is that adding a locally injected analgesic, which will take effect once the epidural analgesia fades, may alleviate perineal pain and improve women's overall well-being and satisfaction. The proposed trial is a two-arm, single-masked, prospective randomized superiority control trial. Women with a working epidural analgesia, and status post a vaginal delivery involving a second-degree laceration will be invited to participate. Women in the local anesthesia (LA) arm will get a LA injected to the laceration and women in the sham arm will get an injection with saline. The differences in perineal pain between the groups will be evaluated at time of the first analgesic (TFA) demand, maternal satisfaction at 24 hours, and visual analog scale (VAS) pain score.


Clinical Trial Description

n/a


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05972681
Study type Interventional
Source Montefiore Medical Center
Contact Clarissa P Diniz, MD
Phone 718-904-2767
Email cdiniz@montefiore.org
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date April 2024
Completion date July 2025

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT04573504 - Antibiotics for Severe Perineal Laceration to Prevent Infection Following Repair Phase 4