Abstract
Combined spinal-epidural analgesia is a technique that provides rapid-onset, profound epidural analgesia for laboring parturients at almost any stage of labor. The most commonly used technique is a needle-through-needle technique in which the epidural space is identified with an epidural needle, and then a long spinal needle is inserted through the epidural needle and into the cerebrospinal fluid. Intrathecal fentanyl, 15 to 25 μg ± 1 to 2.5 mg of bupivacaine, or 2.5 to 5 μg of sufentanil ± 1 to 2.5 mg of bupivacaine are injected to produce analgesia. The epidural needle is removed and an epidural catheter inserted. Analgesia is maintained by low-dose, patient-controlled epidural analgesia; continuous infusion epidural analgesia; or intermittent top-ups. Pruritus is a very common side effect. Respiratory depression is rare but of great concern. Current literature favors low-dose epidural analgesia in labor as leading to the best patient and obstetric outcomes. Both low-dose conventional epidural analgesia and combined spinal-epidural analgesia produce similar outcomes. The main advantage of combined spinal-epidural analgesia is its predictable profound analgesia in parturients during late labor or when labor is progressing rapidly. Copyright © 2001 by W.B. Saunders Company
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