A prospective study of blocking T10-L1 with local anaesthetic, bilaterally in 30 patients undergoing caesarean section under general anaesthesia has been shown to provide effective postoperative analgesia thus requiring significantly less narcotics (mean 66.6 mg of pethidine) compared to the 30 patients in the control group (mean 163 mg of pethidine). A cocktail of 0.5% of bupivacaine with adrenaline and xylocaine 1% produced analgesia for the duration ranging from 8 to 12 hours (mean 8.4 hours). Patients with abdominal field block were awake, alert and comfortable during the immediate postoperative period. They were pain-free sufficiently to put the babies to the breast early and frequently.
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Combined spinal-epidural (CSE) has become an increasingly popular alternative to traditional labour epidural due to its rapid onset and reliable analgesia provided. This was a prospective, convenient sampling study to determine the effects of CSE analgesia on labour outcome.
METHODS: One hundred and ten healthy primigravida parturients with a singleton pregnancy of ≥37 weeks gestation and in the active phase of labour were studied. They were enrolled to the CSE (n=55) or Non-CSE (n=55) group based on whether they consented to CSE analgesia. Non-CSE parturients were offered other methods of labour analgesia. The duration of the first and second stage of labour, rate of instrumental vaginal delivery and emergency cesarean section, and Apgar scores were compared.
RESULTS: The mean duration of the first and second stage of labour was not significantly different between both groups. Instrumental delivery rates between the groups were not significantly different (CSE group, 11% versus Non-CSE group, 16%). The slightly higher incidence of cesarean section in the CSE group (16% versus 15% in the Non-CSE group) was not statistically significant. Neonatal outcome in terms of Apgar score of less than 7 at 1 and 5min was similar in both groups.
CONCLUSION: There were no significant differences in the duration of labour, rate of instrumental vaginal delivery and emergency cesarean section, and neonatal outcome in parturients who received compared to those who did not receive CSE for labour analgesia.