• Obstetrics and gynecology · Apr 2001

    Epidural analgesia and fetal head malposition at vaginal delivery.

    • M K Yancey, J Zhang, D L Schweitzer, J Schwarz, and M A Klebanoff.
    • Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Tripler Army Medical Center, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA. michael.yancey@haw.tamc.amedd.army.mil
    • Obstet Gynecol. 2001 Apr 1; 97 (4): 608-12.

    ObjectiveTo determine if nulliparas who delivered with on-demand epidural analgesia are more likely to have malpositioning of the fetal vertex at delivery than women delivered during a period of restricted epidural use.MethodsA retrospective cohort of nulliparous women with spontaneous labor delivered during a 12-month period immediately before the availability of on-demand labor epidural analgesia was compared with a similar group of nulliparas delivered after labor epidural analgesia was available on request. The primary outcome variable was a non-occiput anterior position or malpositioned fetal head at vaginal delivery.ResultsThe frequency of epidural use increased from 0.9% before epidural analgesia became available on demand to 82.9% afterward. Fetal head malpositioning at vaginal delivery occurred in 26 of 434 (6.0%) women delivered in the before period compared with 29 of 511 (5.7%) in the after period (relative risk 0.95, 95% confidence interval 0.6, 1.6). No statistically significant difference in the incidence of fetal head malpositioning was present after patients were stratified by mode of delivery (Mantel-Haenszel weighted relative risk 0.94, 95% confidence interval 0.6, 1.4). The study sample size provided 85% power to detect a two-fold increase in the incidence of fetal malpositioning from a baseline rate of 6% associated with on-demand epidural use.ConclusionProviding on-request labor epidural analgesia to nulliparas in spontaneous labor did not result in a clinically significant increase in the frequency of fetal head malpositioning at vaginal delivery.

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