• Pak J Med Sci · Sep 2018

    Can Perfusion Index be used as an Objective Tool for Pain Assessment in Labor Analgesia?

    • Ilke Kupeli and Nur Gozde Kulhan.
    • Dr. Ilke Kupeli, Department of Anesthesiology and Reanimation, Erzincan University, Erzincan, Turkey.
    • Pak J Med Sci. 2018 Sep 1; 34 (5): 1262-1266.

    ObjectiveTo establish a relationship between the Visual Analog Scale for pain (VAS) in the recovery time of epidural analgesia and the Perfusion Index (PI) values at that time and to test the possibility of using PI as an objective tool for pain assessment.MethodsThirty women were included in the study. After inserting epidural catheter, the initial applicationtime of epidural analgesia was taken as 0th minute. Hemodinamics, VAS, and PIvalues were recorded at 5th, 10th, 30th, 60th minutes and every two hours until the birth and the 30th minute after the birth.ResultsHR, SAP, DAP, PI, VAS values before the procedure were different than all follow-ups (p<0.001). A negative and significant correlation was found at 10th, 30th, 60th minutes and 2nd hour after drug administration from epidural catheter(rho:0.38; p:0.03, rho:0.47; p:0.009, rho:0.75; p<0.001, rho:0.46; p:0.009, respectively). As the pain decreased, the perfusion index increased. In 17 patients requiring additional doses, PI increased after the all medications, but a decrease was observed in the VAS values(p<0.05).ConclusionsIn this study, it was determined that the pain decreased with epidural analgesia, perfusion index increased and the pain level increased significantly when the perfusion index started to decrease.

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