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. 1999 May;88(5):1073-6.
doi: 10.1097/00000539-199905000-00019.

Does epinephrine improve the diagnostic accuracy of aspiration during labor epidural analgesia?

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Does epinephrine improve the diagnostic accuracy of aspiration during labor epidural analgesia?

M C Norris et al. Anesth Analg. 1999 May.

Abstract

Aspiration reliably detects almost all IV multiorifice epidural catheters. Although a supplemental epinephrine 15-microg test dose may detect the rare IV catheter that does not yield blood on aspiration, false-positive epinephrine responses may cause some women to unnecessarily undergo repeat epidural catheter insertion. We evaluated 532 consecutive eligible patients requesting neuraxial labor analgesia. Patients were excluded if they had a contraindication to epinephrine or if they received intrathecal sufentanil/bupivacaine. Multiorifice catheters were inserted 4-6 cm into the epidural space as part of an epidural (n = 305) or combined spinal-epidural (n = 270) technique. We used aspiration, a lidocaine/epinephrine test dose, and bolus injection or infusion of dilute bupivacaine/sufentanil solutions to systematically determine IV, intrathecal, or epidural catheter location. Aspiration alone detected 47 of 48 intravascular catheters. There were 10 positive epinephrine responses: 2 were true positives, 7 were falsely positive (subsequent local anesthetic injection/infusion produced bilateral sensory change and analgesia), and 1 catheter was removed without further testing. Aspiration detected almost all intravascular catheters. Although the epinephrine test dose did detect one catheter that proved to be in a blood vessel, 87.5% of positive responses occurred in women without intravascular catheters.

Implications: Epidural catheters may enter a blood vessel. Many clinicians use epinephrine to detect these catheters. Because aspiration alone detects almost all IV multiorifice catheters in laboring women, a subsequent epinephrine test dose may be unnecessary.

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