Regional-Anaesthesie
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Regional-Anaesthesie · May 1989
[Does the development of methemoglobin in the newborn infant affect the suitability of prilocaine for pudendal anesthesia? A clinical study in the peripartum phase].
Pudendal block is a well established method of achieving analgesia during the second stage of labor. Whenever a large amount of a local anesthetic has to be injected in well vascularized tissue, local anesthetic drugs with low systemic toxicity should be used, to minimize side effects. This means that prilocaine is the drug of choice. ⋯ Formerly prilocaine was judged to be contraindicated in pregnant women during delivery because of the small redox capacity of fetal erythrocytes. Our study, however, demonstrates that 200 mg prilocaine for pudendal block does not induce methemoglobinemia in newborns to any significant extent. One explanation for this may be the increased renal elimination of local anesthetics in newborns and the low fetomaternal ratio.