al-Mufti R, Morey R, Shennan A, Morgan B
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Queen Charlotte's and Chelsea Hospital, London, UK.
Br J Obstet Gynaecol. 1997 May;104(5):554-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1471-0528.1997.tb11531.x.
To determine the effect of patient-controlled combined spinal epidural analgesia (PCEA) on maternal pulse and blood pressure, and fetal heart rate in primigravid women, when adapting different positions in labour.
A prospective study.
Queen Charlotte's and Chelsea hospital, London.
Fifty-five primigravid women in labour at > or = 37 weeks of gestation; 40 women had supervised standing top-ups given by an anaesthetist. A further 15 women had PCEA top-ups given in each of standing, sitting and lying positions.
Maternal pulse rate, blood pressure and fetal heart rate changes following epidural top-ups.
In the first 40 women there was no clinically significant fall in their blood pressure (< 5 mmHg). The subsequent 15 women who had PCEA top-ups had no fall in blood pressure in the standing and sitting positions, though the average blood pressure fell significantly when a top-up was given in the lying position. Maternal heart rate increased significantly at 12 min post top-up when the women were in the standing position (P = 0.0018). In the 15 women who had PCEA top-ups, the CTG showed improvement in decelerations when women were in the standing position but deterioration when in the lying position (P < 0.01).
Patient-controlled epidural analgesia top-ups with maternal mobility may be beneficial to the fetus possibly by reducing the hypotension normally associated with top-ups in the lying position.