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Differential Sensory Block During Labor Epidural Analgesia: a Prospective Observational Study to Investigate the Relationship of Lower and Upper Sensory Block Levels to Cold With Sensory Block to Pinprick and Light Touch

S

Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute, Mount Sinai Hospital

Status

Completed

Conditions

Labor Pain

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Epidural analgesia remains the gold standard for pain control during labor and delivery. Proper assessment of an epidural's level of blockade is important for providing safe and effective analgesia. Previous studies have established that the most commonly tested modality for adequacy of epidural blockade is a patient's sensory blockade to cold temperature. In a study performed at our institution, Soares et. al. (publication pending) documented two thresholds of sensory block to ice: one defined as the lower sensory block level, in which the patient is able to notice the cold sensation but perceives that it is not as cold as a control dermatome; the other defined as the upper sensory block level, in which the patient perceives that the cold sensation is at approximately the same temperature as if it were applied to a non-anesthetized area such as the neck or face. Although this a known finding to nurses and physicians assessing the sensory block to ice, this phenomenon and its magnitude has not been previously reported in epidural anesthesia. The goal of this study is to examine patients with labour epidurals and to determine the dermatomal relationship between the lower and upper sensory block levels to cold when compared with sensory blockade to both pinprick and light touch.

Enrollment

30 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 60 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • ASA Physical Status Classification II and III parturients
  • Requested and received a labour epidural
  • Capable of consenting to the study
  • Have no language barrier which may obfuscate the sensory block assessment
  • Are receiving programmed intermittent epidural boluses (PIEB) for maintenance analgesia, which is the Mount Sinai Hospital default maintenance regimen

Exclusion criteria

  • Medical comorbidities that could compromise the body's sensitivity to cold, pinprick, or touch
  • Epidurals performed under a combined spinal-epidural (CSE) or dural puncture epidural (DPE) technique
  • Epidurals with a documented unintentional dural puncture
  • Inadequate epidural analgesia requiring either manually administered epidural boluses, an increase in the concentration of their maintenance local anesthetic, or a repeat of their epidural

Trial design

30 participants in 1 patient group

Women receiving epidural analgesia for labor
Description:
Sensory block level check Patients will have their sensory block level checked using 3 modalities: ice, pin prick and soft touch (cotton ball).

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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