Minimum Analgesic Dose of Epidural Sufentanil for First-stage Labor Analgesia

Author:

Capogna Giorgio1,Parpaglioni Raffaella2,Lyons Gordon3,Columb Malachy4,Celleno Danilo5

Affiliation:

1. Director Obstetric Anesthesia.

2. Research Fellow in Obstetric Anesthesia, Department of Anesthesiology.

3. Consultant Obstetric Anaesthetist, Department of Obstetric Anesthesia, St James’ University Hospital, Leeds, United Kingdom.

4. Consultant Anaesthetist, Intensive Care Unit, Withington Hospital, Manchester, United Kingdom.

5. Chief, Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care, AFaR-CRCCS Fatebenefratelli General Hospital, Rome, Italy.

Abstract

Background The aim of this prospective, double-blind, sequential allocation study was to compare the effects of spontaneous and prostaglandin-induced labor on the minimum analgesic dose of epidural sufentanil in the first stage of labor. Methods Seventy healthy, nulliparous women, at more than 37 weeks' gestation with cervical dilatation from 2 to 4 cm, requesting epidural pain relief in labor were enrolled. The subjects were assigned to two different groups according to whether labor was spontaneous or induced with dinoprostone 0.5 mg. Parturients received 10 ml of the study solution through a lumbar epidural catheter. The initial dose was sufentanil 25 microg, and subsequent doses were determined by the response of the previous patient in the same group using up-down sequential allocation. The analgesic effectiveness was assessed using 100-mm visual analog pain scores. The up-down sequences were analyzed using the method of independent paired reversals and probit regression. Results The minimum analgesic dose of sufentanil in spontaneous labor was 22.2 microg (95% CI: 19.6, 22.8) and 27.3 microg (95% CI: 23.8, 30.9) in induced labor. The minimum analgesic dose of sufentanil in induced labor was significantly greater (P = 0.0014) than that in spontaneous labor (95% CI difference: 2.9, 9.3) by a factor of 1.3 (95% CI: 1.1, 1.5). Conclusion Prostaglandin induction of labor produces a significantly greater analgesic requirement than does spontaneous labor.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference26 articles.

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