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Seminars in perinatology · Apr 2002
ReviewCombined spinal-epidural analgesia for labor: breakthrough or unjustified invasion?
- Ruth Landau.
- Département d'Anesthésiologie, Pharmacologie et Soins Intensifs de Chirurgie, Hĵpitaux Universitaires de Genève, Suisse. ruth.landau@hcuge.ch
- Semin. Perinatol. 2002 Apr 1;26(2):109-21.
AbstractThe combined spina-epidural (CSE) technique has become increasingly popular for labor analgesia. The advantages of the CSE include more rapid onset of analgesia, reduced total drug dosage, minimal or no motor blockade, and increased patient satisfaction. CSE has also been associated with more rapid cervical dilation when compared to epidural analgesia in nulliparous women in early labor. Despite these potential advantages, the indications for CSE versus epidural analgesia remain unclear and controversial. This review should allow better understanding of the benefits and risks of this technique, and bearing in mind that no ultimate neuraxial analgesic exists, it would seem that CSE should be considered a major breakthrough in the management of labor analgesia.
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