בשל "הגנת זכויות יוצרים", מובא להלן קישור למאמר בלבד. לקריאתו בטקסט מלא, אנא פנה לספרייה הרפואית הזמינה לך.
As the application of a test dose after epidural catheter insertion in obstetrics has recurrently been associated with serious adverse events affecting both maternal and foetal outcomes, the question whether to test or not remains a controversial issue.
Recent findings Present guidelines do not provide clear recommendations in this regard and several recent surveys indicate a heterogeneity in clinical routine.
Physiological alterations during pregnancy and labour restrict the use and also the validity of traditional test agents.
Epinephrine is not appropriate to detect a vascular insertion in labour and the application of a local anaesthetic test dose may lead to dose-dependent fatal consequences should the catheter be intrathecal, due to an increased sensitivity in parturients.
Given the current practice of opioid-amended–low-concentration epidurals, the waiving of a test dose results at worst in a failed epidural, a stark contrast to the potentially severe to fatal complications of a ‘traditional’ test dose.
Hence, an originally preventive measure providing potentially more harm than the consequences of the situation aimed to prevent, should not be recommended.
A simple fractionated administration of the initial analgesic dose seems reasonable though.