neuraxial analgesia
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2022 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Wang ◽  
Xuyuan Ma ◽  
Le Chen ◽  
Fangfang Jiang ◽  
Jie Zhou

Abstract Objectives To investigate whether neuraxial analgesia and other medical interventions have effects on the circadian rhythm of labor. Methods It was a retrospective propensity score matched cohort study. Parturients were recruited, who delivered term singletons in cephalic position, from seven hospitals in Harvard University Partners Healthcare Systems, 2016–2018. The parturients were divided into two groups, neuraxial analgesia delivery and spontaneous vaginal delivery, the stratification was performed according to labor induction, oxytocin, operative delivery. The parturients in each group were divided into 12 periods in every 2 h based on the birth time of babies. Cosine function fitting was used to verify whether the birth time had the characteristic of circadian rhythm. Results In spontaneous vaginal deliveries, the peak of birth time was at 2:00–4:00, and the nadir was at 14:00–16:00, this showed a circadian rhythm presented by a cosine curve fitting with the formula (y = 0.0847 + 0.01711 × cos(− 0.2138 × x + 0.4471). The labor rhythm of NAD (Neuraxial Analgesia Delivery) group changed completely, inconsistent with the cosine curve fitting of the circadian rhythm. The intervention of induction and oxytocin blurred the circadian rhythm of SVD (Spontaneous Vaginal Delivery) group and increased the amplitude of the fluctuation in NAD (Neuraxial Analgesia Delivery) group. The intervention of operative delivery had changed the distribution curve completely both in the SVD (Spontaneous Vaginal Delivery) group and the NAD (Neuraxial Analgesia Delivery) group. Conclusions Neuraxial analgesia did affect on circadian rhythm of labor, changed the cosine rhythm of labor with spontaneous vaginal delivery, and this trend was aggravated by the use of induction, oxytocin and operative delivery.


2021 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan Sebastián Parada Zuluaga ◽  
Diego Alejandro Bastidas Palacios ◽  
Yerlin Andrés Colina Vargas ◽  
Nury Isabel Socha García ◽  
Juan Guillermo Barrientos Gómez ◽  
...  

Introduction: The duration of labor and the immediate puerperium are affected by obstetric and maternal-fetal factors. Interventions to provide obstetric analgesia may prolong the hospital stay. Objective: To characterize the procedure for obstetric analgesia and describe the time elapsed between analgesia and delivery and postpartum surveillance in healthy mothers. Methods: Observational, descriptive trial. The time elapsed between analgesia and delivery, and postpartum surveillance were measured in healthy pregnant women with vaginal delivery and a prescription of a neuraxial analgesia technique. Results: 226 patients were included. The mean time elapsed between analgesia an delivery was 4 hours (IQR 3-7). 50.7 % (n = 114) received early analgesia (neuraxial technique with ≤ 4 centimeters of cervical dilatation), of which 48.2 % (n = 109) experienced a duration of analgesia until delivery longer than expected. The mean cervical dilatation at the time of the neuraxial approach was 4 centimeters (IQR 4-6) and the epidural technique was the most frequently used – 92.9 % (n = 210). The mean postpartum surveillance was 20 hours (IQR 15-27). Conclusions: Half of the patients included received early analgesia and around fifty percent of them took longer than expected in completing delivery. The postpartum surveillance time was consistent with the provisions of the Ministry of Health and with the current trend of a short postpartum surveillance aimed at early hospital discharge and the benefits thereof.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Carvalho ◽  
A Carrão ◽  
I Ferraz ◽  
C Castanheira ◽  
M Ghira

Author(s):  
Myriam Brebion ◽  
Marie-Pierre Bonnet ◽  
Priscille Sauvegrain ◽  
Marie-Josèphe Saurel-Cubizolles ◽  
Béatrice Blondel ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Carvalho ◽  
A Carrão ◽  
I Ferraz ◽  
C Castanheira ◽  
M Ghira

Author(s):  
Lisa Clarke ◽  
Jennifer Curnow ◽  
Briony Cutts ◽  
Bryony Ross ◽  
Giselle Kidson-Gerber

Objective To describe the characteristics and outcomes of women with inherited bleeding disorder during pregnancy and birth. Design Retrospective cohort study. Setting Tertiary care hospitals, NSW and Victoria Australia. Population 100 women with inherited bleeding disorders, who birthed 134 live infants from 132 pregnancies. Methods Data was retrospectively obtained from the patient and neonatal medical records. Descriptive analysis was used to report maternal and pregnancy characteristics, birth and neonatal outcomes. Main outcome measures Factor replacement, neuraxial analgesia use and complications, post-partum haemorrhage and neonatal complications. Results PPH occurred in 22% of deliveries with primary PPH occurring in 20% and secondary PPH in 4% of births. 48% of PPHs were classified as major. PPHs occurred across the spectrum of IBD and was evenly distributed between women who had “normalised” their factor levels in pregnancy compared to those requiring factor at the time of birth. An obstetric cause was identified in more than half of PPHs. Conclusions Women with inherited bleeding disorders can deliver safely and receive neuraxial analgesia without complication when best practices are adhered to. PPH appears to occur at higher rates than the general population despite adequate factor levels or planned replacement. Whilst an obstetric cause was demonstrable in the many cases, these findings raise concern over the current definition of “adequate” factor levels at the time of birth.


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