Association Between Bolus Rate and the Adequacy of Labor Analgesia Using Timed-intermittent Boluses
Labor Pain, Obstetric Pain
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Labor Pain focused on measuring epidural bolus, pain management, labor analgesia
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
Term, nulliparous, English-speaking patients with singleton vertex pregnancies, who were 18 years or older, who presented to the Labor and Delivery Unit of Prentice Women's Hospital of Northwestern Memorial Hospital in spontaneous labor or for induction of labor were eligible to participate in the study
Exclusion Criteria:
History of chronic opioid analgesic use, prior opioid administration during labor, refusal of a vaginal examination prior to initiation of combined spinal-epidural (CSE) analgesia, or the presence of contraindications to neuraxial analgesia, such as coagulopathy or sepsis. Patients with cervical dilation > 5cm at the request for an epidural analgesia and women that were dilated > 5cm upon presentation to the labor and delivery unit were not approached for inclusion in the study; patients were excluded from the study after randomization if request for provider-administered supplemental bolus, or delivery, occurred within 90 minutes of intrathecal injection, or if there was a need for epidural catheter replacement during labor.
Sites / Locations
- Northwestern Memorial Hospital
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Experimental
High rate bolus (CADD-Solis pump)
Low rate bolus (CADD-Solis pump)
Labor analgesia will be maintained using timed-intermittent boluses of local anesthetic with PCEA using the CADD-Solis pump. The bolus rate will be 300 mL/h in the high-rate bolus group.
Labor analgesia will be maintained using timed-intermittent boluses of local anesthetic with PCEA using the CADD-Solis pump. The bolus rate will be 100 mL/h in the low-rate bolus group.