Description of labor analgesia with lidocaine or bupivacaine and Apgar at birth. Retrospective descriptive observational study

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37980/im.journal.revcog.20232149

Keywords:

Apgar, epidural analgesia, delivery, bupivacaine

Abstract

Labor brings with it the experience that causes one of the most intense pains ever described. At the Social Security Institute of El Salvador (ISSS) approximately 600 to 700 vaginal deliveries are registered per month and of these approximately 10-20% request labor analgesia, which the anesthesia service provides through the epidural approach. It is known that the ideal drug for labor analgesia is considered to be bupivacaine or lidocaine 3, however, it is of special importance to describe the APGAR score of newborns born to mothers who received either of these two drugs by the aforementioned route. Objective: To determine how the use of lidocaine and bupivacaine as epidural anesthetic influences the post-birth APGAR score in pregnant women in the active phase of labor requiring epidural analgesia. Methods: The present is a retrospective descriptive observational observational study from primary sources. The anesthesiology service of the Hospital Materno Infantil Primero de Mayo has a record of how many and to which patients epidural analgesia is administered, so the research team conducted a review of the anesthetic technique and described the Apgar at the end of vaginal delivery in those patients who received epidural analgesia with lidocaine or bupivacaine. Filtering was performed with the Excel database using inclusion and exclusion criteria, finally including 81 patients in the data analysis. It was found during the scrutiny of these that 25 of them had undergone emergency cesarean section and in 6 of these same records not all the data necessary for the analysis were completely recorded, so that 51 clinical records were finally used for the present investigation. Results: The average APGAR of the patients who received labor analgesia with bupivacaine was 8.75 and 8.9 at one minute and five minutes respectively, and the average APGAR achieved by the newborns of patients who received labor analgesia with lidocaine was 9 points at one minute and five minutes. Conclusion: The average APGAR in patients who received bupivacaine is 8.75 and that of lidocaine is 9.

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Published

2023-04-30

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