Addition of clonidine to a continuous patient-controlled epidural infusion of low-concentration levobupivacaine plus sufentanil in primiparous women during labour

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Abstract

We studied the potentiation of analgesia for labour by the addition of clonidine to epidural low-concentration levobupivacaine with sufentanil in a randomised, double-blinded study. We enrolled primiparous women who were in spontaneous labour. The study solutions, made of 100 ml levobupivacaine 0.0625% plus sufentanil 0.45 μg.ml-1 and either 150 μg clonidine or no clonidine, were used for induction of analgesia, and for its maintenance with self-administered boluses and a continuous background infusion. The need for additional epidural boluses during labour was lower and analgesia and maternal satisfaction were better in the clonidine (n = 57) than in the control group (n = 58). Blood pressure was lower and the rate of instrumental delivery higher in the clonidine group. Clonidine (1.36 μg.ml-1) added to the epidural solution of low-concentration levobupivacaine improves the quality of analgesia. The relevance of the haemodynamic effects should be explored in larger validation studies. © 2011 The Authors. Anaesthesia © 2011 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland.

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Bazin, M., Bonnin, M., Storme, B., Bolandard, F., Vernis, L., Lavergne, B., … Dualé, C. (2011). Addition of clonidine to a continuous patient-controlled epidural infusion of low-concentration levobupivacaine plus sufentanil in primiparous women during labour. Anaesthesia, 66(9), 769–779. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2044.2011.06785.x

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