Increasing body mass index predicts increasing difficulty, failure rate, and time to discovery of failure of epidural anesthesia in laboring patients. J Clin Anesth 2017 Feb;37:154-158
Date
02/27/2017Pubmed ID
28235511Pubmed Central ID
PMC6145168DOI
10.1016/j.jclinane.2016.11.010Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85008873246 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site) 36 CitationsAbstract
STUDY OBJECTIVE: Obese parturients both greatly benefit from neuraxial techniques, and may represent a technical challenge to obstetric anesthesiologists. Several studies address the topic of obesity and neuraxial analgesia in general, but few offer well described definitions or rates of "difficulty" and "failure" of labor epidural analgesia. Providing those definitions, we hypothesized that increasing body mass index (BMI) is associated with negative outcomes in both categories and increased time needed for epidural placement.
DESIGN: Single center retrospective chart review.
SETTING: Labor and Delivery Unit of an inner city academic teaching hospital.
PATIENTS: 2485 parturients, ASA status 2 to 4, receiving labor epidural analgesia for anticipated vaginal delivery.
INTERVENTIONS: None.
MEASUREMENTS: We reviewed quality assurance and anesthesia records over a 12-month period. "Failure" was defined as either inadequate analgesia or a positive test dose, requiring replacement, and/or when the anesthesia record stated they failed. "Difficulty" was defined as six or more needle redirections or a note indicating difficulty in the anesthesia record.
MAIN RESULTS: Overall epidural failure and difficulty rates were 4.3% and 3.0%, respectively. Patients with a BMI of 30kg/m2 or higher had a higher chance of both failure and difficulty with two and almost three fold increases, respectively. Regression analysis indicated that failure was best predicted by BMI and less provider training while difficulty was best predicted by BMI. Additionally, increased BMI was associated with increased time of discovery of epidural catheter failure.
CONCLUSIONS: Obesity is associated with increasing technical difficulty and failure of neuraxial analgesia for labor. Practitioners should consider allotting extra time for obese parturients in order to manage potential problems.
Author List
Kula AO, Riess ML, Ellinas EHAuthors
Elizabeth H. Ellinas MD Associate Dean, Professor in the Anesthesiology department at Medical College of WisconsinAyse Oge Kula MD Associate Professor in the Anesthesiology department at Medical College of Wisconsin
MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold
AdultAnalgesia, Epidural
Analgesia, Obstetrical
Anesthesia, Epidural
Anesthesia, Obstetrical
Body Mass Index
Catheters
Delivery, Obstetric
Female
Humans
Obesity
Pain Management
Pregnancy
Pregnancy Complications
Retrospective Studies
Time Factors
Treatment Failure
Treatment Outcome