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Single dose epidural hydromorphone in labour pain: maternal pharmacokinetics and neonatal exposure. | LitMetric

Single dose epidural hydromorphone in labour pain: maternal pharmacokinetics and neonatal exposure.

Eur J Clin Pharmacol

Department of Anaesthesiology, Medical Research Center Oulu (MRC Oulu), Oulu University Hospital, PO Box 21, 90029, Oulu, Finland.

Published: July 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Epidural hydromorphone may offer advantages over traditional opioids like sufentanil or fentanyl for pain management during labor due to its prolonged analgesic effects and better water solubility.
  • A pilot study with seven healthy parturients tested various doses of hydromorphone, revealing that lower doses were often due to side effects like nausea and itchiness.
  • Results indicated that while hydromorphone was consumed alongside additional pain relief, and no significant neonatal issues were found, further research is necessary to establish the optimal dosing for labor pain.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Epidural hydromorphone could be useful in obstetric analgesia as there is a need for a more water-soluble opioid than sufentanil or fentanyl with prolonged analgesic effect. To our knowledge, the pharmacokinetics of epidural hydromorphone has not been evaluated in parturients.

Materials And Methods: In this pilot study, seven healthy parturients were given a single epidural dose of hydromorphone for labour pain. One parturient received 1.5 mg, two 0.75 mg and four 0.5 mg of hydromorphone hydrochloride. Dose was decreased due to nausea and pruritus. Hydromorphone's effect, adverse effects and plasma concentrations were evaluated. Neonatal drug exposure was evaluated by umbilical vein and artery opioid concentration at birth. Neonatal outcomes were assessed using Apgar and the Neurologic Adaptive Capacity Score (NACS).

Results: All patients received additional levobupivacaine doses on parturients' requests. The first dose was requested at a median of 163 min (range 19-303 min) after hydromorphone administration. A total of 12 opioid related expected adverse events were reported by seven parturients. All newborn outcomes were uneventful. Hydromorphone's distribution and elimination after single epidural dose seem similar to that reported for non-pregnant subjects after intravenous hydromorphone administration, but further research is required to confirm this observation.

Conclusions: The optimal dose of hydromorphone in labour pain warrants further evaluation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7306027PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00228-020-02880-6DOI Listing

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