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Comparison of Epidural Fentanyl Versus Epidural Sufentanil for Analgesia in Ambulatory Patients in Early Labor

Overview
Journal Anesth Analg
Specialty Anesthesiology
Date 2000 Jul 27
PMID 10910851
Citations 3
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Abstract

Unlabelled: Epidural sufentanil, after a lidocaine and epinephrine test dose, provides adequate analgesia and allows for ambulation during early labor. Epidural fentanyl has not been evaluated in this setting. The current study was designed to determine whether there is an analgesic difference between epidural fentanyl and epidural sufentanil in laboring patients. Forty-six laboring nulliparous women, at <5-cm cervical dilation, who requested epidural analgesia were enrolled. After a 3-mL test dose of lidocaine with epinephrine, patients were randomized to receive either sufentanil 20 microg or fentanyl 100 microg. After administration of the analgesic, pain scores and side effects were recorded for each patient at 5, 10, 15, 20, and 30 min and every 30 min thereafter, by an observer blinded to the technique used. There were no demographic differences between the two groups. Pain relief was rapid for all patients. The mean durations of analgesia were similar between the sufentanil group (138 +/- 50 min) and the fentanyl group (124 +/- 42 min). Side effects were similar between the two groups. In early laboring patients, epidural fentanyl 100 microg, after a lidocaine and epinephrine test dose, provides analgesia comparable to that of sufentanil 20 microg.

Implications: In early laboring patients, epidural fentanyl 100 microg, after a lidocaine and epinephrine test dose, provides analgesia comparable to that of sufentanil 20 microg.

Citing Articles

Comparison of Intrathecal Injection of Fentanyl and Sufentanil on the Onset, Duration, and Quality of Analgesia in Labor: A Randomized, Double-Blind Clinical Trial.

Manouchehrian N, Rabiei S, Moradi A, Lakpur Z Anesth Pain Med. 2020; 10(3):e99843.

PMID: 32944556 PMC: 7472646. DOI: 10.5812/aapm.99843.


Comparison of efficacy of bupivacaine and fentanyl with bupivacaine and sufentanil for epidural labor analgesia.

Kalra S, Saraswat N, Agnihotri G Saudi J Anaesth. 2010; 4(3):178-81.

PMID: 21189856 PMC: 2980665. DOI: 10.4103/1658-354X.71569.


Epidural analgesia for childbirth: effects of newer techniques on neonatal outcome.

Capogna G, Camorcia M Paediatr Drugs. 2004; 6(6):375-86.

PMID: 15612838 DOI: 10.2165/00148581-200406060-00005.