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Effect of Epidural Analgesia During Labor on Force of Maternal Push

Phase 4
Withdrawn
Conditions
Labor Pain
Analgesia
Maternal; Procedure
Interventions
Drug: Epidural analgesia (0.125% bupivacaine/2mcg fentanyl solution)
Registration Number
NCT04888858
Lead Sponsor
Henry Ford Health System
Brief Summary

There are multiple factors that determine progress of normal vaginal delivery. Frequency, duration and strength of uterine contractions are important for progress throughout labor, and abdominal wall muscle contractions contribute to progress during the final stage. Epidural analgesia helps to alleviate the pain associated with uterine contractions, this however this comes at the expense of prolonging labor by reducing the strength of abdominal wall muscle contractions.

The purpose of this prospective study is to quantify how much epidurals decrease the strength of abdominal wall contractions. Intraabdominal pressure will be used as surrogate to strength of abdominal wall contractions, and it will be measured via a foley catheter inserted into the urinary bladder as part of standard procedure for patients receiving labor epidurals. We will compare the change in intraabdominal pressure when patients perform forceful abdominal contractions (valsalva maneuvers) prior to and during epidural analgesia. This will lay the foundation for a future study in which we plan to compare the effects of different epidural analgesia types and concentrations on abdominal wall muscle contractions.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
WITHDRAWN
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
Not specified
Inclusion Criteria
  • Adult (18 years and older)
  • Pregnant women in their third trimester
  • Able to read and speak English
  • Capacity to consent to participate
  • Receiving a labor epidural catheter during their labor and delivery at HFH-Main
Exclusion Criteria
  • Severe cardiac disease
  • People who are unable/medically recommended not to perform valsalva maneuvers
  • People who are not undergoing labor epidural analgesia

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Epidural AnalgesiaEpidural analgesia (0.125% bupivacaine/2mcg fentanyl solution)All subjects will be given epidural analgesia to treat their labor pain. As part of standard protocol for all patients who receive a labor epidural, the epidural will then be tested using 3ml of 1.5% lidocaine and 1:200,000 epinephrine test solution, and the epidural catheter will then be loaded with 10ml of 0.125% bupivacaine solution. The epidural catheter will then be connected to a programmed intermittent epidural bolus pump which will administer 5ml of a 0.125% bupivacaine/2mcg fentanyl solution every 30minutes. The first dose will be given following 30minutes after the loading dose. 30 minutes after loading the loading dose and after the first pump dose has been given, we will assess the VAS pain scores and the level of the analgesic based on decreased sensation to ice.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
The change in intraabdominal pressure (surrogate of maternal force)2 hours following initial administration of labor epidural

The change in intraabdominal pressure will be measured prior to receiving epidural analgesia, and again at 1 and 2 hours following administration. The change observed before and after will be compared to quantify the decreased change following epidural administration.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Duration of second stage of laborUp to 72 hours after initial administration of labor epidural

How long the second stage of labor takes.

Apgar scoresUp to 72 hours after initial administration of labor epidural

The apgar scores will be measured.

Mode of deliveryUp to 72 hours after initial administration of labor epidural

Whether the child is delivered via vaginal or cesarean birth.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Henry Ford Hospital

🇺🇸

Detroit, Michigan, United States

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