The
Dangers of Epidurals, and the Surprising Problem with Research on
Childbirth Anesthesia Back
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From Lise
Eliot's What's Going on in There: How the Brain and Mind Develop
in the First Five Years of Life confirms my worries. Here are
a few of her concerns:
- Every drug used
for epidural anesthesia can diffuse out of the epidural space
and enter the baby’s circulation. The good news…is
that the total amount of drug reaching the baby is considerably
lower than in systemic administration. Nonetheless, whatever dose
does enter the mother’s bloodstream crosses quite efficiently
to the baby’s circulation.
- Although many
studies report no effect…on Apgar scores or cursory neurological
exams, few of them have used wholly unmedicated mothers as a control
group. Using more sensitive indices of infant behavior, some studies
have found that newborns…are less alert, less able to orient
toward stimuli, and less mature in their motor abilities than
babies of unmedicated mothers. Greater exposure…makes babies
jumpy and more irritable. The effects are most pronounced on the
first day after birth, but some have been found to persist up
to six weeks of life.
- The most common
side effect of epidural administration is…a reduction in
the mother’s blood pressure. Maternal hypotension is at
least partially responsible for the fact that the baby’s
heart rate often slows down for a while shortly after an epidural
anesthetic is injected. If the mother’s blood pressure falls
too low for too long, it can seriously compromise blood flow to
the placenta, reducing the fetus’s supply of oxygen. These
serious side effects are prevented by giving the woman fluids
through an IV….If this countermeasure doesn’t work,
another drug may be needed to prevent her blood pressure from
falling too low and compromising the baby.
- Many studies
have now shown that women who receive epidurals have longer labors,
on average, than women receiving systemic analgesia. This is especially
the case during the pushing phase…. Women receiving epidurals
are more frequently diagnosed with dystocia, the failure
of labor to progress, four times likelier to require forceps,
and two or three times likelier to end up having a C-section,
than women receiving systemic analgesia or no pain relief.
- Although most
babies are not significantly affected, epidural anesthesia may
compromise the health of the small subset of babies already at
risk due to illness, prematurity, or a difficult delivery. Encouraging
more women to have unmedicated deliveries would be better for
babies, and for the women themselves, who would be exposed to
fewer side effects, have shorter labors, and might be in better
shape to begin breast-feeding and bonding with their babies right
after delivery.
None of these
concerns surprised me. What I did find astonishing was her report
of the difficulty in getting reliable data on the adverse effects
of epidural anesthesia relative to no anesthesia at all, instead
of relative to other forms of pain relief: “There are simply
too few ‘natural’ deliveries to enroll in a clinical
study!” Upon reflection, I believe there are more mothers
who chose unmedicated delivery than she implies, though I’m
also certain the numbers are far lower than they would be if the
public were better educated about the joys of natural childbirth
and the dangers of anesthesia. Two additional reasons come to mind
for the lower numbers available for study: Those who chose natural
childbirth often do so for reasons that would also make them reluctant
to have their newborns’ lives disrupted by clinical study.
And, sadly, the hostile atmosphere frequently encountered by those
seeking to avoid unnecessary medical interventions in the births
of their babies often drives them underground, where they avoid
observation for good as well as ill.
Epidurals and
Pain Relief
For
the most part, epidural analgesia does effectively relieve labor
pain.1
Obstetrical anesthesiologists continue to state that epidural analgesia
has other, potentially catastrophic, adverse effects but, with safe
clinical practice, these problems are extremely rare. We
will suggest in the material that follows that these complications
are not extremely rare, and that women are not receiving adequate
informed consent about what these complications are and their accompanying
frequency. Nor are they being offered any serious alternatives to
epidural anesthesia. Despite this, anesthesiologists such
as Eberle and Norris argue that specific anaesthetic techniques
... or obstetrical management can limit or eliminate these risks
of epidural labour analgesia. What must be remembered for any technical
procedure, is that it is studied in major academic centers where
highly skilled professors supervise residents and all outcomes are
monitored closely. The actual practice, however, takes place in
smaller institutions by less qualified individuals so that the actual
complication rates of any procedure (obstetric, cardiac, pulmonary)
are always higher than what are found in studies.
[Return
to "Quick-Index of the Medical Risks of Epidural Anesthesia"]
Myth:
Natural childbirth makes about as much sense as natural dentistry
and epidurais are the Cadillac of anesthesia.
Reality: "Reported maternal complications of epidural analgesia
include: dural puncture; hypotension; . . . increased use of operative
delivery; neurological complications; bladder dysfunction; headache;
backache; toxic drug reactions; respiratory insufficiency; and even
maternal death. The fetus may also suffer complications as a result
of maternal effects (for example, hypotenston) or direct drug toxicity."
Simkin
and Dickersin 1989
"Planning
Your Childbirth," a brochure put out by the American Society of
Anesthesiologists (ASA), encapsulates the mainstream medical viewpoint
on epidural anesthesia. Equating it with "pleasant, safe, and comfortable,"
the brochure begins by inverting the meaning of natural childbirth:
Today's mothers are reconsidering the idea that
childbirth is "natural" only without medication, and they are choosing
to have pain relief. . . to help them experience a more comfortable
birth.
It misrepresents the effect on labor: Will it slow
down my labor? Some may
have a brief period of decreased uterine contractions. Many . .
. are pleasantly surprised to learn that after the epidural. ..
[has] made them more comfortable and relaxed, their labor may actually
progress faster.
Can I "push" when needed? Epidural analgesia
allows you to rest during the most strenuous part of labor. . .
. [W]hen it is time to push
. . . [t]he epidural block can reduce your pain while allowing you
to push when needed.
It
glosses over the risks of epidurals: Will the
epidural block affect my baby? Considerable
research has proven that epidural . . . anesthesia can be safe for
both mother or baby. However, special skills, precautions, judgements
and treatments are required.
What are the risks . . . ? [C]omplications
or side effects can occur even though you are monitored carefully
and your anesthesiologist takes special precautions to avoid them.
To help prevent a decrease in blood pressure . . . [etc.]. By holding
as still as possible during the needle placement, you help to decrease
the likelihood of a headache [so it is her fault!]. The discomfort,
sometimes lasting a few days, often can be reduced or eliminated
by simple measures. [T]he anesthetic . . . may . . . affect the
chest muscles and make it seem harder to breathe. Sometimes oxygen
might be given to relieve this feeling and help the breathing. .
. . To help avoid unusual reactions [stemming from injecting the
medication into a vein], your anesthesiologist will administer a
test dose.
They tell no lies, but they
sure skate around the truth.
If an epidural is a Cadillac, it is a used one with concealed defects.
The risks of epidurals convert
normal labor to a high-tech event. An IV must be started to help
counteract the tendency of epidurals to cause hypotension. Electronic
fetal monitoring (EFM) is necessary because epidurals can cause
fetal distress, and the mother's vital signs must be closely monitored
to warn of maternal adverse reactions. If the needle or catheter
pierces a blood vessel, which is easy to do in pregnancy because
blood vessels are enlarged (Corke and Spielman 1985, abstracted
below), or the needle goes deeper than the epidural space, convulsions,
respiratory paralysis, and/or cardiac arrest can occur. Tests are
done to confirm proper placement before giving the full dosage,
but these are not completely preventative. Trained personnel, resuscitation
equipment, and medication must be immediately available.
In labor, epidurals increase the need for oxytocin,
instrumental delivery, episiotomy, and bladder catheterization.
The first-time mother is
more likely to have a cesarean. Temporary postpartum complications
include urinary incontinence, nerve injury causing muscle weakness
or abnormal sensation, and headache, which can last for days and
is excruciatingly painful. Instrumental delivery and episiotomy
increase the probability of deep perineal tears, which can have
long-term effects on sexual satisfacfion and fecal continence (see
Chapter 14). Backache and headache may become chronic. In the newborn,
epidurals may cause jaundice, and there may be adverse behavioral
effects. Finally, no one is collecting
figures, but having an epidural must add considerably to the cost
of the birth.
Recent innovations have not helped. Even when the dosage was so
small that many women could walk despite the epidural, cesarean
rates were not reduced (Oriol 1992).
Within the past decade, epidurals went from being reserved for particularly
prolonged or difficult labors or cesarean sections - when they are,
indeed, a godsend - to the norm at American deliveries. An
overwhelming number of doctors and an increasing number of nurses
think epidurals should be routine. Why should any woman suffer in
this day and age? they ask. Their patients have bought this, making
epidurals all but universal at many hospitals.
To reach this point, doctors swept the dark
side of epidurals under the rug (Brownridge
1991; Reynolds 1989; Richardson 1988; Cheek and Gutsche 1987, abstracted
below; Clark 1985). They attributed life-threatening complications
to poor technique. And if nobody made any errors, well, complications
occurred rarely, and if handled right, mother and baby were almost
always fine. They denied that epidurals lead to other interventions
and that these interventions introduce risks. Or if they did not
deny it, they did not see intervention rates as a problem. They
also dismissed adverse effects on the baby as either nonexistent
or too insignificant to worry about.
Labor pain became not only something to be
blotted out, but in a stunning reversal, the pain, not epidurals
became the danger. The mother's
stress hormones are accused of causing fetal distress. Women who
do not want an epidural are portrayed as masochistic, misguided,
or misinformed, even, by virtue of this last twist, uncaring of
their baby's welfare (Brownridge 1991; Reynolds 1989).
Does it make sense to tell women to avoid even
a single glass of wine during pregnancy and then push drugs during
labor? This contradiction is one tipoff that attitudes toward epidurals
are culturally determined beliefs masquerading as objective truths.
Inversions of this kind are rife
in the popular press on epidurals, as well as in the medical literature.
As examples, in a newspaper article, a psychologist and an anesthesiologist
denounce childbirth educators for leading women to think they can
cope with labor pain unaided by drugs and for telling them epidurals
have risks (San Jose Mercury News 1993). These same experts
describe the guilt, anger, and sense of failure (even to feeling
suicidal) women experience after they ultimately "require" an epidural.
Epidurals are safe, they contend, but labor pain and attempting
natural childbirth are hazardous to psychological health. The
ASA brochure warns in oversized uppercase letters not to eat or
drink after labor begins. Epidurals are safe, even part of natural
childbirth, but quenching thirst and eating during hours of strenuous
activity are dangerous. WHY? Because they know you are
probably headed to the Operating Room for a C-section!
The need to make reality match belief leads to considerable distortion
of the facts and prevents a rational evaluation of the risks and
benefits. For example, Cheek and
Gutsche (1987), as do others, recommend epidural block to protect
high-risk fetuses from the dangers of maternal stress response to
labor pain, shortly after they say a maternal drop in blood pressure
is "the most common side effect" of epidurals and warn that a compromised
fetus may not tolerate even a 15% to 20% fall in maternal pressure.
Another tipoff is the attitude toward those
who do not conform. Cultural
norms are traditionally enforced by exerting pressure through ridicule
or scorn. Most women with mainstream medical care who make an effort
to resist epidurals will find this out for themselves.
In fact, the pain and stress of normal labor have value. The
stress hormones produced in response to labor, adrenaline and noradrenaline,
trigger the final preparation of the fetal lungs to breathe air,
mobilize fuel for energy, and, by shunting fetal blood away from
the extremities and to the brain and heart (exactly opposite of
the effect in adults), protect the fetus against hypoxia (oxygen
lack) during labor (Lagercrantz and Slotkin 1986).
Nerves in the cervix, and later the pelvic
floor muscles and vagina, transmit stretching sensations as well
as pain. These stretch receptors
signal the pituitary to produce more oxytocin, which increases the
tempo of the labor, causing further cervical dilation. Once the
cervix is completely open and the head distends the pelvic floor
and vagina, surges of oxytocin are produced, creating the urge to
push. Numb the nerves with an epidural, and you also wipe out the
positive feedback mechanism (Johnson and Everitt 1988; Bates et
al. 1985; Goodfellow et al. 1983).
Pain guides the mother. Commonly,
the positions and activities she chooses for comfort are also those
that promote good labor progress or help shift the baby into the
right position for birth. Remove the pain, and you kill that
feed back mechanism too.
The pro-epiduralists see the mother as needing
rescue, but in reality her body prepares her to meet labor's challenge.
Stress hormones give her stamina. By the time of the birth, endorphins,
the body's natural painkillers, are found at levels 30 times higher
than in nonpregnant women, and levels can be 20 times higher in
women with prolonged or difficult labors as in uncomplicated labors
(Jimenez 1988). Endorphins, produced in response to pain and stress,
are also mood elevators. They are responsible, for example, for
"runner's high." Oxytocin has mood-elevating and amnesiac properties
too (Fuchs 1990).
Unlike epidurals, natural childbirth strategies facilitate labor
both physiologically and psychologically. They
raise endorphin levels, whereas epidurals reduce them (Jimenez 1988).
They give the mother knowledge, skills, and confidence. Studies
show that the key to a positive labor experience is mastery - a
sense of control over events. With an epidural, control is completely
given over to medical staff (Simkin 1991; Humenick 1981; Humenick
and Bugen 1981).
While the normal stress of labor is beneficial,
extreme anxiety or fear may have adverse effects (Simkin 1986).
However, this type of stress may be extrinsic to labor. The animal
studies that reported that stress in labor caused hypoxia in a compromised
fetus - and which are quoted as an argument for epidurals - took
laboring monkeys, pinched their toes, shined bright lights in their
eyes, or jumped up and down in front of their cages (Simkin 1986).
The monkeys did fine - until doctors hurt or frightened them.
Moreover, although epidurals relieve pain, one study found they
did nothing to relieve stress. Wuitchik,
Bakal, and Lipshitz (1990) asked laboring women what they were thinking
at various points in labor and rated their reponses on a scale measuring
coping versus distress. No differences were found between women
who had epidurals and those who did not. The solution to undue stress
in labor seems to be not an epidural, but supportive care and a
relaxed, peaceful environment. As Simkin says, "Much of the stress
of labor is preventable because many of the stressors . . . are
imposed in the form of thoughtless routines, unfamiliar personnel,
and technological interventions."
Meanwhile, one report on serious nonfatal epidural
complications in 500,000 women yielded an incidence rate of life-threatening
complications of roughly 1 in 14,000 cases and
a serious complications rate overall of 1 in 5000 (Scott and Hibbard
1990, abstracted below). Another study reported a 1 in 3000 life-threatening
complication rate (Crawford 1985, abstracted below). Women
have died of epidural anesthesia but never of the pain of labor.
Drugs
have been withdrawn from the market or forced into restricted use
because of serious adverse reactions in the range of 1 in 1000 to
1 in 30,000 (Cohn 1989), yet epidurals are enthusiastically promoted
to healthy women undergoing a normal process who are told the advantages
are overwhelming and the risks are nil.
Epidurals
are like any other obstetric intervention: they have their place,
but they are a mixed blessing.
Notes: The British use extradural for epidural.
I have limited the abstracts to studies
primarily of bupivacaine because that seems overwhelmingly to be
the anesthetic of choice.
To show that adverse effects are not dose-dependent, I have listed
concentrations after the citation.
Most articles refer to epidural analgesia, a softer word
meaning "relief of pain." I use anesthesia, meaning "loss
of sensation," because of its more serious connotation.
For a list of the generic and equivalent trade names of the medications
used in epidurals, see Table
13.1.
SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT POINTS
Epidurals substantially increase
the incidence of oxytocin augmentation, instrumental delivery (which
increases the incidence of deep perineal tears), and bladder catheterization,
although the effect seems to depend on obstetric management. (Abstracts
2-9, 11-15, 17, 23, 26-28, 32-34)
In primiparas, epidurals substantially increase the cesarean
rate for dystocia. Here, too, the effect may depend on management.
(Abstracts 2, 5-7, 10-15, 26, 33)
THE BABY WILL NOT ROTATE TO THE CORRECT
POSITION FOR BIRTH! Epidurals decrease the probability of
an occiput posterior (OP) or occiput transverse (OT) baby's rotating.
Oxytocin does not help. (Abstracts 2-3, 8-9, 13-14,28)
Having the epidural at 5 cm dilation or more greatly reduces excess
incidence of OP and OT babies and cesarean for dystocia. (Abstracts
13-14)
Epidurals may not relieve any pain
or may not relieve all pain. (Abstracts 14, 20, 27)
Innovations in procedure - lower dosages,
continuous infusion, adding a narcotic - have not decreased epidural-related
problems. (Abstracts 6-7, 10, 13-15, 19,27, 32-35, 42)
Delaying pushing until the head has descended to the perineum increases
the chances of spontaneous birth.* Evidence is divided as to whether
letting the epidural wear off increases spontaneous delivery. (Abstracts
3-5, 7)
*Two recent studies have claimed that delayed pushing did not increase
the spontaneous birth rate, but in neither case was pushing truly
delayed. The mean wait time was 52 minutes in one (Gleeson and Griffith
1991), and 72% began pushing less than one hour after full dilation
in the other (Manyonda, Shaw, and Drife 1990).
Maternal complications of epidurals include (Abstract 20,1/3000
potentially life threatening; Abstract 22, 1/14,000 potentially
life threatening; Abstract 36; 3-10/10,000 high spinal or intravascular):
Maternal hypotension (Abstract 1, 1.4-12%; Abstract 7, 10%; Abstract
15, 16%; Abstract 17, 32% in high-risk population; Abstract 27,
5%). This reduces uteroplacental blood supply and can cause fetal
distress. High-risk babies are at particular risk because they lack
reserves to cope. (Abstracts 1, 7, 15, 17-19,20, 32)
Convulsions (Abstract 22, 4/100,000). (Abstracts
19-20, 22, 42)
Respiratory paralysis (Abstract 22, 16/million). (Abstracts 19-20,
22)
Cardiac arrest (Abstract 22, 6/million). (Abstracts 1, 16,
19-20, 22, 36)
Allergic shock (Abstract 22, 2/million).
(Abstracts 19, 22)
Maternal nerve injury through injury by the needle or catheter,
poor positioning, forceps injury, infection, hematoma (bleeding
at the site), or subarachnoid injection of chloroprocaine. The last
three usually cause permanent damage (Abstract 21, 36.2/10,000 with
epidurals versus 2.4/10,000 with no analgesia, all temporary; Abstract
22, 8/100,000, 4/million permanent; Abstract 40, 24% or more "nerve
root irritation"). (Abstracts 1, 16, 18-22, 40-41)
Spinal headache, an incapacitating
headache that can last days (Abstract 19, up to 50% with
dural puncture; Abstract 22, 3/100,000; Abstract 24, 0.1% of all
epidurals). (Abstracts 19, 22, 24)
Increased maternal core temperature, an
additional stressor on both mother and fetus that may lead to a
septic workup to rule out infection in the baby. (Abstracts 30-31)
Temporary urinary incontinence. (Abstract 22)
Long-term (weeks to years) backache (Abstract
24, 18.2% versus 10.2% nonepidural), headache (Abstract 24, 4.6%
versus 2.9% nonepidural), migraines (Abstract 24, 1.9% versus 1.1%
nonepidural), numbness or tingling. (Abstracts 20, 24)
Serious complications occur despite proper procedure and precautions.
The epinephrine test dose can cause complications. (Abstracts 16,
18-20, 26, 36-42)
Epidural anesthetics "get" to the baby.
(Abstracts 15-16, 19, 27-28)
Epidurals do not protect the fetus from
fetal distress. In fact, they cause abnormal fetal heart rate (FHR),
sometimes severe, which may occur in association with or independent
of maternal blood pressure (Abstract 7, 11%; Abstract 15, 43% bupivacaine,
16% chloroprocaine, 10% lidocaine; Abstract 17, 9.7% associated
with maternal hypotension in a high-risk population; Abstract 26,
11%; Abstract 34, 20%). (Abstracts 7, 12-15, 17, 19-20, 26-27, 32-34,
37, 42)
Epidurals may cause neonatal jaundice.
(Abstracts 25, 28)
Epidurals may cause adverse neonatal physical
and behavioral effects. (These are both direct effects and indirect
effects from the increased rate of labor complications and interventions.)
The importance of the behavioral effects is debated. (Abstracts
1,15, 28-29)
Epidural anesthesia may relieve hypertension, but hypertensive women
are at particular risk of epidural-induced hypotension, which reduces
placental blood supply. (Abstracts 17-18)
The
'Caine Family
Generic
Name
bupivacaine
2-chloroprocaine
lidocaine
mepivacaine |
Trade
Name
Marcaine, Sensoricaine
Nesacaine
Xylocaine
Carbocaine
|