Current practice of epidural analgesia during normal labour. A survey of maternity units in the United Kingdom. 1993

M W Davies, and J C Harrison, and T D Ryan
Department of Anaesthesia, Liverpool Maternity Hospital, Merseyside.

A postal survey of all maternity units in the United Kingdom was conducted to gain information regarding policies for epidural analgesia for labour. The average epidural rate was 19.7% and 78% of units offered a 24-h service. The majority of units inserted the epidural with the patient in the lateral position, using a midline approach, with loss of resistance to air and saline being used almost equally. Most units used 3 ml of 0.5% bupivacaine as a test dose, and only 10% of units used adrenaline in the test dose. The use of adrenaline in subsequent top-ups was infrequent. Bupivacaine 0.5% was used most frequently for the initial and the second stage top-up, whereas 0.25% was most often used during the first stage of labour. Midwife top-ups were allowed in 75% of units and in only 14% of cases was this from a local anaesthetic reservoir. Epidural analgesia using a continuous infusion of anaesthetic was routinely used in 28% of units, mostly with 0.125% bupivacaine; about half of these units did so because midwives were unable to perform top-ups. Routine use of epidural opioids was most frequent when anaesthetic infusions were used, otherwise it was uncommon.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D007263 Infusions, Parenteral The administration of liquid medication, nutrient, or other fluid through some other route than the alimentary canal, usually over minutes or hours, either by gravity flow or often by infusion pumping. Intra-Abdominal Infusions,Intraperitoneal Infusions,Parenteral Infusions,Peritoneal Infusions,Infusion, Intra-Abdominal,Infusion, Intraperitoneal,Infusion, Parenteral,Infusion, Peritoneal,Infusions, Intra-Abdominal,Infusions, Intraperitoneal,Infusions, Peritoneal,Intra Abdominal Infusions,Intra-Abdominal Infusion,Intraperitoneal Infusion,Parenteral Infusion,Peritoneal Infusion
D007743 Labor, Obstetric The repetitive uterine contraction during childbirth which is associated with the progressive dilation of the uterine cervix (CERVIX UTERI). Successful labor results in the expulsion of the FETUS and PLACENTA. Obstetric labor can be spontaneous or induced (LABOR, INDUCED). Obstetric Labor
D011247 Pregnancy The status during which female mammals carry their developing young (EMBRYOS or FETUSES) in utero before birth, beginning from FERTILIZATION to BIRTH. Gestation,Pregnancies
D005260 Female Females
D006113 United Kingdom Country in northwestern Europe including Great Britain and the northern one-sixth of the island of Ireland, located between the North Sea and north Atlantic Ocean. The capital is London. Great Britain,Isle of Man
D006757 Hospital Units Those areas of the hospital organization not considered departments which provide specialized patient care. They include various hospital special care wards. Hospital Unit,Unit, Hospital,Units, Hospital
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D000779 Anesthetics, Local Drugs that block nerve conduction when applied locally to nerve tissue in appropriate concentrations. They act on any part of the nervous system and on every type of nerve fiber. In contact with a nerve trunk, these anesthetics can cause both sensory and motor paralysis in the innervated area. Their action is completely reversible. (From Gilman AG, et. al., Goodman and Gilman's The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics, 8th ed) Nearly all local anesthetics act by reducing the tendency of voltage-dependent sodium channels to activate. Anesthetics, Conduction-Blocking,Conduction-Blocking Anesthetics,Local Anesthetic,Anesthetics, Topical,Anesthetic, Local,Anesthetics, Conduction Blocking,Conduction Blocking Anesthetics,Local Anesthetics,Topical Anesthetics
D001291 Attitude of Health Personnel Attitudes of personnel toward their patients, other professionals, toward the medical care system, etc. Staff Attitude,Attitude, Staff,Attitudes, Staff,Health Personnel Attitude,Health Personnel Attitudes,Staff Attitudes
D015360 Analgesia, Epidural The relief of pain without loss of consciousness through the introduction of an analgesic agent into the epidural space of the vertebral canal. It is differentiated from ANESTHESIA, EPIDURAL which refers to the state of insensitivity to sensation. Epidural Analgesia

Related Publications

M W Davies, and J C Harrison, and T D Ryan
July 1999, Anaesthesia,
M W Davies, and J C Harrison, and T D Ryan
October 1998, Anaesthesia,
M W Davies, and J C Harrison, and T D Ryan
January 1997, European journal of anaesthesiology,
M W Davies, and J C Harrison, and T D Ryan
January 2008, International journal of obstetric anesthesia,
M W Davies, and J C Harrison, and T D Ryan
October 2000, Acta anaesthesiologica Scandinavica,
M W Davies, and J C Harrison, and T D Ryan
August 2002, Acta obstetricia et gynecologica Scandinavica,
M W Davies, and J C Harrison, and T D Ryan
May 1999, European journal of anaesthesiology,
M W Davies, and J C Harrison, and T D Ryan
November 2020, BMC pregnancy and childbirth,
M W Davies, and J C Harrison, and T D Ryan
January 1997, Acta anaesthesiologica Scandinavica,
Copied contents to your clipboard!