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BJOG.
2002
Dec;109(12):1359-65.
A randomised
clinical trial comparing the effects of
delayed versus immediate pushing with
epidural analgesia on mode of delivery and
faecal continence.
Fitzpatrick M,
Harkin R,
McQuillan K,
O'Brien C,
O'Connell PR,
O'Herlihy C.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology,
National Maternity Hospital, University
College Dublin, Ireland.
Objectives:
To assess the effects of delayed
vs immediate pushing in second stage of
labour with epidural analgesia on delivery
outcome, postpartum faecal continence and
postpartum anal sphincter and pudendal nerve
function.
Design:
Prospective, randomised,
controlled trial. Tertiary referral maternity
teaching hospital. POPULATION: One hundred
and seventy nulliparous women randomised at
full dilatation to immediate or delayed
pushing.
Methods:
A total of 178 nulliparous
women, all with continuous epidural
analgesia, were randomised at full cervical
dilatation, but before the fetal head had
reached the pelvic floor, to either
immediate pushing or 1 hour delayed pushing.
Labour outcome was analysed and all women
underwent postpartum assessment of anal
sphincter function, including anal manometry.
Those women who had a normal delivery
underwent neurophysiology studies, while
those women who had an instrumental delivery
underwent endoanal ultrasound. MAIN OUTCOME
MEASURES: Mode of delivery; altered faecal
continence.
Results:
Ninety women were
randomised to immediate pushing and 88 to
delayed pushing. The spontaneous delivery
rate was 56% (50/90) in the immediate
pushing group and 52% (46/88) in the delayed
pushing group. Mean duration of labour for
the immediate pushing group was 427 minutes
compared with 480 minutes for the delayed
pushing group (P = 0.005). Eighty-four
percent (76/90) of women in the immediate
pushing group received oxytocin to augment
labour, 21/76 (28%) in the second stage
only. Eighty-one percent (71/88) of women in
the delayed pushing group received oxytocin
to augment labour, 22/71 (31%) in the second
stage only. Fetal outcome did not differ
between the two groups. Episiotomy rates
were 73% and 69% in the immediate pushing
and delayed pushing groups, respectively.
26% (23/90) of the immediate pushing group
and 38% (33/88) of the delayed pushing group
complained of altered faecal continence
after delivery (NS). Manometry, ultrasound
and neurophysiology studies did not differ
significantly between the two groups.
Overall, 55% of women after instrumental
delivery had endosonographic evidence of
damage to the external anal sphincter, while
36% of women after spontaneous delivery had
abnormal neurophysiology studies.
Conclusions:
Rates of instrumental delivery
were similar following immediate and delayed
pushing, in association with epidural
analgesia. Delayed pushing prolonged labour
by 1 hour but did not result in
significantly higher rates of altered
continence or anal sphincter injury, when
compared with immediate pushing.