A retrospective review of 202 randomly selected records of parturient labors examined the relationship between cervical dilation at epidural analgesia administration and length of the second stage of labor. The epidural group received bupivacaine 0.11% or 0.125% with sufentanil 1 to 2 micrograms/mL using a Bard Patient Controlled Anesthesia II pump. Labor management and outcomes were compared with a nonepidural group who chose unmedicated childbirth, intravenous narcotics, or pudendal block. A significant inverse correlation was found between cervical dilation at epidural administration and second-stage length in labors that did not use oxytocin. However, linear regression explained only 13.5% of the variance, leaving 86.5% unexplained. In labors in the epidural group that used oxytocin, cervical dilation at epidural administration was not correlated with second-stage length. The epidural group experienced a significantly longer mean length of the second stage. Labors in the epidural group were 3.5 times more likely to have oxytocin induction or augmentation and 4.5 times more likely to experience instrument-assisted delivery. There were no significant differences in Apgar scores between the two infant groups.

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