Quality of Labor Analgesia with Dural Puncture Epidural versus Standard Epidural Technique in Obese Parturients: A Double-blind Randomized Controlled Study

Author:

Tan Hon Sen1,Reed Sydney E.2,Mehdiratta Jennifer E.2,Diomede Olga I.2,Landreth Riley2,Gatta Luke A.3,Weikel Daniel4,Habib Ashraf S.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Department of Women’s Anesthesia, KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital, Singapore.

2. The Divisions of Women’s Anesthesia, Department of Anesthesiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina.

3. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina.

4. Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, Department of Anesthesiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina.

Abstract

Background The dural puncture epidural technique may improve analgesia quality by confirming midline placement and increasing intrathecal translocation of epidural medications. This would be advantageous in obese parturients with increased risk of block failure. This study hypothesizes that quality of labor analgesia will be improved with dural puncture epidural compared to standard epidural technique in obese parturients. Methods Term parturients with body mass index greater than or equal to 35 kg · m–2, cervical dilation of 2 to 7 cm, and pain score of greater than 4 (where 0 indicates no pain and 10 indicates the worst pain imaginable) were randomized to dural puncture epidural (using 25-gauge Whitacre needle) or standard epidural techniques. Analgesia was initiated with 15 ml of 0.1% ropivacaine with 2 µg · ml–1 fentanyl, followed by programed intermittent boluses (6 ml every 45 min), with patient-controlled epidural analgesia. Parturients were blinded to group allocation. The data were collected by blinded investigators every 3 min for 30 min and then every 2 h until delivery. The primary outcome was a composite of (1) asymmetrical block, (2) epidural top-ups, (3) catheter adjustments, (4) catheter replacement, and (5) failed conversion to regional anesthesia for cesarean delivery. Secondary outcomes included time to a pain score of 1 or less, sensory levels at 30 min, motor block, maximum pain score, patient-controlled epidural analgesia use, epidural medication consumption, duration of second stage of labor, delivery mode, fetal heart tones changes, Apgar scores, maternal adverse events, and satisfaction with analgesia. Results Of 141 parturients randomized, 66 per group were included in the analysis. There were no statistically or clinically significant differences between the dural puncture epidural and standard epidural groups in the primary composite outcome (34 of 66, 52% vs. 32 of 66, 49%; odds ratio, 1.1 [0.5 to 2.4]; P = 0.766), its individual components, or any of the secondary outcomes. Conclusions A lack of differences in quality of labor analgesia between the two techniques in this study does not support routine use of the dural puncture epidural technique in obese parturients. Editor’s Perspective What We Already Know about This Topic What This Article Tells Us That Is New

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference22 articles.

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2. Dural puncture with a 26-gauge spinal needle affects spread of epidural anesthesia.;Suzuki;Anesth Analg,1996

3. Dural puncture epidural versus conventional epidural block for labor analgesia: A systematic review of randomized controlled trials.;Heesen;Int J Obstet Anesth,2019

4. A systematic review of dural puncture epidural analgesia for labor.;Layera;J Clin Anesth,2019

5. Dural puncture epidural technique improves labor analgesia quality with fewer side effects compared with epidural and combined spinal epidural techniques: A randomized clinical trial.;Chau;Anesth Analg,2017

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