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Neuraxial techniques are the most effective form of labor analgesia in contemporary obstetric anesthesia practice, predominantly through the use of epidural (EPL) and combined spinal-epidural (CSE) techniques. Although drug combinations employed in these methods have advanced, the onset time, block quality, and side effect profiles of both techniques still require further improvement.
The epidural technique is associated with minimal side effects; however, it may occasionally present variable block characteristics such as slow onset, inadequate sacral spread, unilateral or patchy sensory block, motor impairment, and epidural catheter failure.
The dural puncture epidural (DPE) technique is performed by inserting a spinal needle through the shaft of the epidural needle to create a single dural perforation, after which an epidural catheter is placed into the epidural space without administering any drugs into the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). All medications for analgesia or anesthesia are delivered into the epidural space via the catheter. The dural puncture is thought to provide a conduit that facilitates the translocation of drugs from the epidural space into the subarachnoid space, which is believed to account for the clinical features observed with the dural puncture epidural technique advantageous in obstetric patients. Additionally, the process of dural puncture with a spinal needle through the epidural needle allows cerebrospinal fluid return to serve as a "confirmatory" definitive endpoint for the position of the epidural needle tip within the epidural space.
The investigators designed this study to determine whether the dural puncture epidural technique, compared with epidural, could improve the onset time and block characteristics of anesthesia in elective cesarean deliveries.
Compared with the epidural technique, the dural puncture epidural approach has been shown to improve the onset of sacral block as well as the spread of anesthesia and analgesia-characteristics that are particularly advantageous in obstetric patients. Additionally, the process of dural puncture with a spinal needle through the epidural needle allows cerebrospinal fluid return to serve as a "confirmatory" definitive endpoint for the position of the epidural needle tip within the epidural space.
The investigators designed this study to determine whether the dural puncture epidural technique, compared with epidural, could improve the onset time and block characteristics of anesthesia in elective cesarean deliveries.
Full description
This study aims to evaluate the effects of dural puncture epidural (DPE) versus standard epidural anesthesia on the time to surgical anesthesia onset in patients scheduled for elective cesarean section.
• Study Population:
Pregnant women undergoing elective cesarean section
• Compared Techniques:
Dural Puncture Epidural Group → A dural puncture will be performed with a 27G spinal needle before the placement of the epidural catheter.
Standard Epidural Group → An epidural catheter will be placed directly without dural puncture.
• Primary Outcome:
Time from anesthesia administration to onset of surgical anesthesia (defined as time to achieve sensory block at the T5 dermatome level).
• Secondary Outcomes:
Incidence of hypotension
Intraoperative ephedrine requirement
Need for additional doses
Post-dural puncture headache (PDPH)
Time to regression of sensory block
Motor block assessment (Bromage scale)
Study Design:
Prospective: Patients will be identified before anesthesia administration and evaluated going forward.
Randomized: Patients will be randomly assigned to either the dural ponksiyon epidural or standard epidural group.
Controlled: The two groups will be compared to analyze the effects.
Single-Center: The study will be conducted at a single hospital. Inclusion Criteria
Parameters to Be Assessed
All parameters will be assessed by the investigator both intraoperatively and postoperatively in the ward. These include:
Note: All evaluated parameters are part of standard monitoring, with the exception that sensory block level will be specifically assessed every minute for the purposes of this study.
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Exclusion Criteria
Withdrawal and Termination Criteria
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Women scheduled for elective cesarean delivery
Exclusion criteria
Contraindications to neuraxial anesthesia
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
100 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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