Addition of adrenaline to pethidine for epidural analgesia after Caesarean section

We have investigated the addition of adrenaline to epidural pethidine for postoperative analgesia in 40 patients after Caesarean section. In a randomised, double‐blind study, patients received pethidine 25 mg with adrenaline 50 μg (adrenaline group, n = 20) or pethidine 25 mg without adrenaline (plain group, n = 18) epidurally at the first request for postoperative analgesia. The median duration of analgesia was longer in the adrenaline group (196 min; IQR 123–286) compared with the plain group (96 min; IQR 43–113; p = 0.002) and plasma concentrations of pethidine in the first 30 min after injection were lower in the adrenaline group (p = 0.003). Visual analogue scale pain scores in the first 30 min after injection and onset of analgesia, defined by the time for pain scores to decrease by 50%, were similar between groups. Addition of adrenaline to epidural pethidine has advantages for analgesia after Caesarean section.

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