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Effectively Managing Pain During Childbirth

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American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 186(5), S1-S15. ... American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, 186, S173-180. Simpkin, P. & Bolding, A. (2004) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Effectively Managing Pain During Childbirth


1
Effectively Managing Pain During Childbirth
  • Kristi Saxon RNC, CNM, MSN

2
Objectives
  • The participant will understand the physiology of
    pain experienced during the intrapartum period.
  • The participant will be able to identify both
    nonpharmacologic and pharmacologic approaches for
    the management of pain during the intrapartum
    period, including which methods are
    evidence-based.

3
Labor and Childbirth Pain
  • Normal
  • physiological
  • phenomenon

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5
Physiology of Labor Pain
6
Visceral Pain
  • Occurs during 1st stage of labor
  • Diffuse abdominal cramping and uterine
    contractions
  • Caused by uterine distention and stretching of
    the cervix
  • These stimuli are transmitted to the spinal cord
    at the level of the tenth thoracic to the first
    lumbar root
  • Often felt in a different part of the body than
    from where it originated

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Somatic Pain
  • Occurs in 2nd stage of labor
  • Sharper, stinging, more continuous type of pain
  • Usually in the vagina, rectum, and perineum
  • Due to stretching of the structures of the lower
    birth canal
  • Caused by the descent of the fetus
  • These stimuli are transmitted via the pudendal
    nerve to the second to fourth sacral nerves
  • Accompanied by a very powerful urge to push, or
    bear down

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Pain of Nulliparous Women
  • Experience more sensory pain during early labor
  • More often describe pain as severe, intense,
    or very painful than multiparous women
  • Pain reports were less when antenatal classes to
    prepare for labor pain were taken

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Pain of Multiparous Women
  • Experience more intense pain during the late
    first stage and the second stage of labor
  • Most pain a result of rapid fetal descent

13
Factors that influencepain perception
  • Cultural values and learned behaviors
  • Womens expectations about labor pain
  • Birth environment
  • Physiologic and psychosocial influences

14
Cultural values andlearned behaviors
  • Caucasian women want nurture and support during
    labor most believe highly in pharmacologic
    management of labor pain
  • Hispanic women moan and rub thighs and abdomen
    rhythmically
  • Haitian women use massage, movement and
    position changes reluctant to accept pain
    medication
  • Filipino women believe that noise and activity
    around them during labor increases labor pain
  • African American women more vocally expressive
    of pain often surrounded by female family
    members or friends
  • American Indian women stoic use meditation,
    self-control and traditional herbs to manage pain
  • Puerto Rican women often very emotive and
    verbally express labor pain

15
Womens Expectations
  • Anxiety and fear of pain correlate with a higher
    reported experience of pain
  • According to Grantly Dick Read Anxiety about
    the pain of labour was a strong predictor of
    negative experiences during labour, lack of
    satisfaction with the birth, and poor emotional
    well-being postnatally.
  • A womans confidence in her ability to cope with
    labor pain is the best predictor of pain during
    the first stage of labor
  • Past experiences of labor pain can affect
    subsequent pregnancies either positively or
    negatively

16
Birth Environment
  • Should foster a sense of comfort and privacy
  • Surrounded by as many or as few individuals as
    desired
  • Relationship with caregivers important
  • Amount of support received from caregiver
  • Quality of relationship with caregiver
  • Involvement with decision-making

17
Physiologic and Psychologic Influences
  • Fear
  • Anxiety
  • Confidence
  • Mental preparedness
  • Helplessness or loss of control
  • Lack of support system
  • Insufficient resources for coping with labor
  • Fear of death of self or baby
  • Hunger
  • Fatigue

18
  • Nonpharmacologic
  • Approaches
  • To
  • Labor Pain
  • Management

19
Continuous Labor Support
  • Refers to non-medical care of the laboring woman
    throughout labor and birth by a trained person,
    usually a doula
  • Labor support includes continuous presence,
    emotional support, physical comforting,
    information and guidance for the woman and her
    partner, facilitation of communication,
    nonmedical information and advice, anticipatory
    guidance, and explanations of procedures.

20
Continuous Labor Support
  • Cochrane meta-analysis
  • 15 RCTs
  • 12,791 women
  • Found a decrease in operative vaginal deliveries,
    cesarean deliveries, and request for analgesia or
    anesthesia
  • Less likely to report dissatisfaction or a
    negative rating of their birth experience

21
Warm Water Baths
  • Involves immersion in warm water deep enough to
    cover the womans abdomen
  • Cochrane analysis
  • 8 RCTs
  • 2939 women
  • Women who used water immersion during the first
    stage of labor reported statistically
    significantly less pain than those not laboring
    in water
  • Also, statistically significant reduction in the
    use of analgesia/anesthesia
  • No adverse outcomes on labor duration, operative
    delivery, or neonatal outcomes

22
Intradermal Water Injections
  • Used to decrease low back pain in labor
  • 4 intradermal injections of 0.05-0.1mL sterile
    water (using a 1-mL syringe with a 25-guage
    needle)
  • Injection over each posterior superior iliac
    spine and 2 others placed 3cm below and 1cm
    medial to each of the first sites.
  • 4 RCTS (451 women)
  • Effectively reduced severe low back pain
  • Pain relief lasted 45-120 minutes
  • Women still used other medications
  • Maternal satisfaction with this method varies
  • More research needed

23
Maternal Movement and Positioning
  • Limited research available
  • However, several descriptive studies report pain
    reduction and enhanced satisfaction from freedom
    of movement during labor and birth
  • Most women prefer upright positions over sitting
    or supine
  • Authors of Cochrane review concluded that there
    is no indication of harm from upright positions
    during second stage and that women should be
    allowed to make informed choices about the birth
    positionsthey might wish to assume for delivery
    of their babies.

24
Touch and Massage
  • Used during labor to enhance relaxation and
    reduce pain and suffering
  • 3 RCTs (1 on touch and 2 on massage)
  • Touch RCT
  • 90 women
  • Blood pressure and expressions of anxiety
    significantly decreased in the touch group
  • Massage RCTs
  • 28 women
  • Reduced pain and anxiety
  • Improved mood
  • 60 women
  • Significantly lower pain reactions in the latent,
    active and transitional phases of labor
  • Drawbacks
  • Partners must be taught appropriate massage
    techniques before labor or during labor by a
    skilled doula, midwife, or massage therapist
  • However, these studies indicate that women
    appreciate being touched and massaged during
    labor, and these simple interventions may reduce
    pain and enhance feelings of well-being

25
Acupuncture
26
Acupuncture
  • 3 RCTs
  • 598 women
  • Not proven to be statistically more effective
    than controls
  • More large studies needed

27
Acupressure
  • Pressure is applied simultaneously to both sides
    of the spine in the lower back
  • Force is initially applied during contractions
    and then continuously
  • 2 RCTs
  • 202 women total
  • Significantly decreased reports of labor pain in
    both studies
  • Also, one of the studies reported a significantly
    shorter labor time

28
Aromatherapy
  • The science of using highly concentrated
    essential oils or essences distilled from plants
    in order to utilize their therapeutic properties
  • Lavender, rose, jasmine, juniper, geranium or
    frankincense used to relieve anxiety and fear
  • No properly controlled trials available

29
Music and Audioanalgesia
  • The use of auditory stimulation, such as music,
    white noise, or environmental sounds to decrease
    pain perception
  • 1 RCT by Phumdoung Good
  • 110 primiparous women
  • 55 women assigned to soft music group for 3
    hours, 55 women in control group
  • Pain measured before starting the study and every
    3 hours
  • Women in the music group had significantly less
    sensation of pain
  • More RCTs needed

30
Childbirth Education
  • Individual or group classes designed to inform
    pregnant women and their partners about labor and
    birth, early parenthood, and infant feeding
  • Insufficient evidence (no recent trials) on
    influence of childbirth education on pain

31
Breathing Techniques
  • Often presented during childbirth education
    classes
  • Intended to complement and promote relaxation or
    to provide distraction from labor pain
  • Have not been studied as independent variables in
    RCTs

32
Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation
(TENS)
  • Transmission of low-voltage electrical impulses
    from a handheld battery-powered generator to the
    skin via surface electrodes
  • Pair of electrodes placed paravertebrally at
    levels of T10-L1 and at S2 to S4
  • Controlled by laboring woman
  • Causes a buzzing or prickling sensation that may
    reduce awareness of contraction pain
  • A meta-analysis 10 RCTs in 877 women, 436
    receiving TENS and 441 as controls, revealed no
    significant difference in pain and the use of
    additional analgesic interventions was not
    different between the two groups

33
Hypnosis
  • A state of focused concentration in which
    suggestions may be made, focusing on diminishing
    awareness of pain, fear and anxiety
  • Cochrane review of 3 RCTs
  • 172 women total
  • 1 trial found no difference between hypnosis and
    control groups
  • 1 trial found a decrease in the use of anesthesia
  • 1 trial found a decrease in the use of narcotics
  • Overall, insufficient evidence of reduced use of
    pain relief medications among women receiving
    hypnosis
  • Contraindicated in persons with any history of
    psychosis

34
Pharmacologic Approachesto Labor Pain Management
35
Systemic Narcotics
  • Drugs given intravenously or intramuscularly
  • Demerol, Morphine, Fentanyl, Stadol, Nubain most
    commonly used
  • Usually given in intermittent doses at the
    patients request
  • Primary mechanism of action is heavy sedation
  • Review by Dr. Leanne Bricker and Tina Lavender
  • Included 48 RCTs examining safety and
    effectiveness of opioids for labor pain relief
  • Most trials compared opioid with opioid, but some
    compared opioid with epidural and opioid with
    paracervical block
  • Not significantly effective for maternal pain
    relief
  • If opioids must be used, Demerol is agent of
    choice because of its familiarity to caregivers
    throughout the world and relatively inexpensive
  • Most women go on to have epidural anesthesia
  • More research needed

36
Nitrous Oxide
  • Inhalation anesthetic
  • Flexible method can be used intermittently
  • Takes effect in about 50 seconds
  • Review by Dr. Mark A. Rosen
  • 11 RCTs reviewed
  • Difficult to compare and summarize
  • Majority of women rated pain relief as high and
    would use method again
  • In summary not as effective as epidural
    equally effective as paracervical block more
    effective than opioids
  • More research needed

37
Paracervical Block
  • Local bilateral injection near the cervix
  • Given during 1st stage of labor
  • Lasts about 2 hours
  • Rarely used in U.S.
  • Research review by Dr. Mark A. Rosen
  • 4 RCTs reviewed
  • effective and relatively simple technique,
    although the skill and experience of the operator
    are among the most important variables related to
    both efficacy and safety
  • Further research needed

38
Epidural Anesthesia
  • Central nerve block technique achieved by
    injection of a local anesthetic close to the
    nerves that transmit pain

39
Epidural Anesthesia
  • Most widely used method of pain management in
    labor
  • Cochrane review of 21 studies
  • Epidural analgesia is effective in reducing pain
    during labor

40
Conclusion
  • Effective
  • Nonpharmacologic
  • Methods
  • Continuous Labor Support
  • Warm Water Baths
  • Intradermal Water Injections
  • Maternal Movement and Positioning
  • Massage
  • Acupressure
  • Music Therapy
  • Effective
  • Pharmacologic
  • Methods
  • Nitrous Oxide
  • Paracervical Block
  • Epidural

41
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42
References
  • Anim-Somuah, M., Smyth, R., Howell, C. (2005).
    Epidural versus non-epidural or no analgesia in
    labour Review. The Cochrane Database of
    Systematic Reviews, 4, 2005.
  • Caton, D., Corry, M. P., Frigoletto, F. D.,
    Hopkins, D. P., Lieberman, E., Mayberry, L., et
    al. (2002). The nature and management of labor
    pain Executive summary. American Journal of
    Obstetrics and Gynecology, 186(5), S1-S15.
  • Cluett, E. R., Nikodem, V. C., McCandlish, R. E.,
    Burns, E. (2002). Immersion in water in
    pregnancy, labour and birth Review. The
    Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 2, 2002.
  • Hodnett, E. D., Downe, S., Edwards, N., Walsh,
    D. (2005). Home-like versus conventional
    institutional settings for birth Review. The
    Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 1, 2005.
  • Lee, H. Ernst, E. (2004). Acupuncture for
    labor pain management A systematic review.
    American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology,
    191, 1573-1579.
  • Leeman, L., Fontaine, P., King, V., Klein, M.,
    Ratcliffe, S. (2003). The nature and management
    of labor pain Part 1. nonpharmacologic pain
    relief, 68(6), 1109-1112.
  • Marmor, T. R. Krol, D. M. (2002). Labor pain
    management in the United States Understanding
    patterns and the issue of choice. American
    Journal of Obstetrics Gynecology, 186,
    S173-180.
  • Simpkin, P. Bolding, A. (2004). Update on
    nonpharmacologic approaches to relieve labor pain
    and prevent suffering. Journal of Midwifery
    Womens Health, 49(6), 489-504.
  • Simpson, K. R. Creehan, P. A. (2007).
    Perinatal Nursing (3rd ed.). New York
    Lippincott Williams Wilkins
  • The CNM Data Group, 1996. (1998). Midwifery
    management of pain in labor. Journal of
    Midwifery and Womens Health, 43(2), 77-82.
  • Tournaire, M. Theau-Yonneau, A. (2007).
    Complementary and alternative approaches to pain
    relief during labor. Evidence-based
    Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 4(4),
    409-417.
  • Trout, K. K. (2004). The neuromatrix theory of
    pain Implications for selected nonpharmacologic
    methods of pain relief for labor. Journal of
    Midwifery and Womens Health, 49(6), 482-488.
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