CYBERMED LIFE - ORGANIC  & NATURAL LIVING

Epidural Analgesia

  • Breast-feeding problems after epidural analgesia for labour: a retrospective cohort study of pain, obstetrical procedures and breast-feeding practices.

    facebook Share on Facebook
    Abstract Title:

    Breast-feeding problems after epidural analgesia for labour: a retrospective cohort study of pain, obstetrical procedures and breast-feeding practices.

    Abstract Source:

    Gynecol Obstet Fertil. 2010 Dec;38(12):747-53. PMID: 15321436

    Abstract Author(s):

    P Volmanen, J Valanne, S Alahuhta

    Article Affiliation:

    Department of Anaesthesiology, Lapland Central Hospital, Rovaniemi, Finland. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

    Abstract:

    Various clinical practices have been found to be associated with breast-feeding problems. However, little is known about the effect of pain, obstetrical procedures and analgesia on breast-feeding behaviour. We designed a retrospective study with a questionnaire concerning pain, obstetrical procedures and breast-feeding practices mailed to 164 primiparae in Lapland. Altogether 99 mothers (60%) returned completed questionnaires that could be included in the analysis, which was carried out in two steps. Firstly, all accepted questionnaires were grouped according to the success or failure to breast-feed fully during the first 12 weeks of life. Secondly, an ad hoc cohort study was performed on the sub-sample of 64 mothers delivered vaginally. As many as 44% of the 99 mothers reported partial breast feeding or formula feeding during the first 12 weeks. Older age of the mother, use of epidural analgesia and the problem of "not having enough milk" were associated with the failure to breast-feed fully. Caesarean section, other methods of labour analgesia and other breast-feeding problems were not associated with partial breast feeding or formula feeding. In the sub-sample, 67% of the mothers who had laboured with epidural analgesia and 29% of the mothers who laboured without epidural analgesia reported partial breast feeding or formula feeding (P = 0.003). The problem of "not having enough milk" was more often reported by those who had had epidural analgesia. Further studies conducted prospectively are needed to establish whether a causal relationship exists between epidural analgesia and breast-feeding problems.

  • Epidural Analgesia

  • Epidural analgesia: breast-feeding success and related factors.

    facebook Share on Facebook
    Abstract Title:

    Epidural analgesia: breast-feeding success and related factors.

    Abstract Source:

    Midwifery. 2009 Apr;25(2):e31-8. Epub 2007 Nov 5. PMID: 17980469

    Abstract Author(s):

    Ingela Wiklund, Margareta Norman, Kerstin Uvnäs-Moberg, Anna-Berit Ransjö-Arvidson, Ellika Andolf

    Article Affiliation:

    Division of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Danderyd Hospital, Karolinska Institutet, S-182 88 Stockholm, Sweden. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

    Abstract:

    OBJECTIVE:to compare the early breast-feeding behaviours of full-term newborns whose mothers had received epidural analgesia (EDA) during an uncomplicated labour, with a group of newborns whose mothers had not received EDA.

    DESIGN AND SETTING:a retrospective comparative study design was used and the study was carried out in a labour ward in Stockholm, Sweden between January 2000 and April 2000. The ward has about 5500 deliveries per year.

    PARTICIPANTS:all maternity records of women who had received EDA during labour (n=585) were included in the study. For each EDA record, a control record was selected, matched for parity, age and gestational age at birth. Women with emergency caesarean section, vacuum extraction/forceps, twin pregnancy, breech presentation or an intra-uterine death, as well as neonates with an Apgar score<7 at 5 mins were excluded. After exclusion, the study population consisted of 351 healthy women and babies in each group.

    METHOD:logistic regression was performed. The dependent variables: (1) initiation of breast feeding after birth; (2) artificial milk given during hospital stay; and (3) breast feeding at discharge were studied in response to: (a) parity; (b) gestational age at birth; (c) length of first and second stage of labour; (d) administration of oxytocin; (e) administration of EDA; and (f) neonatal weight, as independent variables.

    FINDINGS:significantly fewer babies of mothers with EDA during labour suckled the breast within the first 4 hours of life [odds ratio (OR) 3.79]. These babies were also more often given artificial milk during their hospital stay (OR 2.19) and fewer were fully breast fed at discharge (OR 1.79). Delayed initiation of breast feeding was also associated with a prolonged first (OR 2.81) and second stage (OR 2.49) and with the administration of oxytocin (OR 3.28). Fewer newborns of multiparae received artificial milk during their hospital stay (OR 0.58). It was also, but to a lesser extent, associated with oxytocin administration (OR 2.15). Full breast feeding at discharge was also positively associated with multiparity (OR 0.44) and birth weight between 3 and 4 kg (OR 0.42).

    KEY CONCLUSIONS:the study shows that EDA is associated with impaired spontaneous breast feeding including breast feeding at discharge from the hospital. Further studies are needed on the effects of EDA on short- and long-term breast-feeding outcomes.

We use cookies on our website. Some of them are essential for the operation of the site, while others help us to improve this site and the user experience (tracking cookies). You can decide for yourself whether you want to allow cookies or not. Please note that if you reject them, you may not be able to use all the functionalities of the site.