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Bibliographical entry (without author) : | Effect of epidural analgesia with ambulation on labor duration ANESTHESIOLOGY 95 (4): 857-861 OCT 2001 |
Author(s) : | Vallejo MC, Firestone LL, Mandell GL, Jaime F, Makishima S, Ramanathan S |
Year of publication : | 2001 |
URL(s) : | http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&… |
Résumé (français) : |
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Abstract (English) : | Background: Ambulatory epidural analgesia (AEA) is a popular choice for labor analgesia because ambulation reportedly increases maternal comfort, increases the intensity of uterine contractions, avoids inferior vena cava compression, facilitates fetal head descent, and relaxes the pelvic musculature, all of which can shorten labor. However, the preponderance of evidence suggests that ambulation during labor is not associated with these benefits. The purpose of this study is to determine whether ambulation with AEA decreases labor duration from the time of epidural insertion to complete cervical dilatation. |
Sumário (português) : |
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Resumen (español) : |
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Comments : | |
Argument (français) : | La péridurale ambulatoire ne raccourcit pas la durée entre la pose de la péridurale et la dilatation complète. |
Argument (English): | Ambulatory epidural analgesia with walking or sitting does not shorten labor duration from the time of epidural insertion to complete cervical dilatation. |
Argumento (português): |
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Argumento (español): |
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Keywords : | |
Author of this record : | Sandrine Péneau — 01 Mar 2005 |
Discussion (display only in English) | ||
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