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Sterile Water Injections for Childbirth Pain: An Evidenced Based Guide to Practice

Overview
Journal Women Birth
Publisher Elsevier
Date 2017 Dec 16
PMID 29241699
Citations 4
Authors
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Abstract

Background: About 30% of women in labour suffer from lower back pain. Studies of sterile water injections for management of low back pain have consistently shown this approach to be effective. The objective of this evidence-based guide is to facilitate the clinical use of sterile water injections to relieve lower back pain in labouring women.

Methods: To identify relevant publications our search strategy was based on computerised literature searches in scientific databases. The methodological quality of each study was assessed using the modified version of the Jadad scale, 12 studies were included.

Findings: Recommendations regarding the clinical use of sterile water injections for pain relief in labour are reported in terms of the location of injection administration, various injection techniques, number of injections used, amount of sterile water in each injection and adverse effects.

Discussion: Both injection techniques provide good pain relief for lower back pain during labour. The subcutaneous injection technique is possibly less painful than the intracutaneous technique administered, but we are unsure if this impacts on effectiveness. The effect seems to be related to the number of injections and the amount of sterile water in each injection.

Conclusion: The recommendation at present, based on the current state of knowledge, is to give four injections. Notwithstanding the differences in injection technique and number of injections the method appears to provide significant levels of pain relief and can be repeated as often as required with no adverse effect (apart from the administration pain) on the woman or her foetus.

Citing Articles

Effect of topical local anaesthesia on injection pain associated with administration of sterile water injections - a randomized controlled trial.

Martensson L, Gunnarsson B, Karlsson S, Lee N, Bergh I BMC Anesthesiol. 2022; 22(1):35.

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Pregnant Women Have Poor Carbohydrate Knowledge and Do Not Receive Adequate Nutrition Education.

Brown H, Bucher T, Rollo M, Collins C Matern Child Health J. 2021; 25(6):909-918.

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Caesarean delivery rates and analgesia effectiveness following injections of sterile water for back pain in labour: A multicentre, randomised placebo controlled trial.

Lee N, Gao Y, Collins S, Martensson L, Randall W, Rowe T EClinicalMedicine. 2020; 25:100447.

PMID: 32954233 PMC: 7486301. DOI: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2020.100447.


Comparative Analgesic Effects of Intradermal and Subdermal Injection of Sterile Water on Active Labor Pain.

Almassinokiani F, Ahani N, Akbari P, Rahimzadeh P, Akbari H, Sharifzadeh F Anesth Pain Med. 2020; 10(2):e99867.

PMID: 32754431 PMC: 7352939. DOI: 10.5812/aapm.99867.