Transcript for:
Pain Management During Labor

Hi. I'm Meris. And in this video, we're going  to be talking about different ways to manage   pain during labor. I'm going to be following  along using our maternity flashcards.   These are available on our website, leveluprn.com.  And I would definitely encourage you to pick up a   set for yourself. If you already have one,  I would invite you to follow along with me.  Okay, let's get started. So first up, we're  going to be talking about non-pharmacological   pain relief interventions. We talk about  non-pharmacological interventions for pain   all throughout nursing because it's very,  very important. And there's lots of ways to   help control pain. But I feel like this is one  of those places where it's especially important   because labor, typically, will last for a while,  and it's a really strong and intense pain. So we   need to find ways to help our patients manage it. So one of the first ones is effleurage. Let's be   honest, I don't know if I said that right.  It's a French word and I don't speak French,   but what it means is basically lightly stroking  the abdomen. Typically, this is going to be   in rhythm with a patient's breathing during  contractions. So if you imagine, it's going to be   this kind of light touch. The idea here is we're  providing additional tactile stimulation to help   distract the brain. But this one is the one that I  feel like I see the most, sacral counterpressure.   So let's break it down. Sacral meaning of  the sacrum, right, in the very low back,   and counterpressure. We have pressure on the  sacrum already, but it's from inside going out.   So if I can provide counterpressure pushing back  against that pressure, that can help to relieve   some of that pain. This is especially helpful  for your patients who are having back labor,   so where they're feeling most of their pain  in their backs. If you watched my last video,   tell me in the comments if you will remember what  type of fetal presentation can lead to back pain   especially. It's not part of this content. I  just want to see if you were paying attention.  And then, of course, breathing techniques. You  probably have seen this in popular culture,   the hee hee hoo, that sort of thing. Those are  going to be breathing techniques. Important for   a couple of reasons. It's a little bit meditative,  right? It helps our patients focus on something   other than the pain, but it also helps to  make sure that our patients are breathing.   When you are in pain, breathing is actually going  to be more beneficial for you than holding your   breath. Well, what is your initial reaction? Think  about stubbing your toe. You go, "Oh." You're not   going to be taking deep breaths. Very important  that our patients continue to breathe during the   time that they are in labor, right? So these sort  of breathing techniques usually involve taking   classes prior and having someone there to help  coach the patient's breathing, but they can be   very beneficial. There's many other examples here,  and I'll let you take a look at them. But there   are just some really great ways to help distract  your patients or help to provide pain relief   that are not related to drugs. And remember that  our patients may say, "I want a natural labor,"   meaning unmedicated, right? And that's great, and  we need to still be able to help them with their   pain. And those are some great ways to do it. So let's move on now to pharmacological measures.   Now, of course, this is going to be really  important to understand because this is where   I can really hurt somebody, right, is by giving  them the wrong medicine or something like that.   Probably not going to hurt somebody by doing  effleurage on their belly. But with medications,   I could cause serious damage, so I would really  focus on this stuff. So we have systemic ways of   relieving pain. Big ones are going to be opioids,  right? We know that these are very strong and   effective pain medicines in general, but they  can be used also during labor. Then there's other   things that we can give, such as antiemetics for  nausea. We can also give benzodiazepines to help   with some anxiety. But really, I would focus on  those opioids because that's targeting the pain   itself. Now, because mom and baby are still linked  through their circulatory system, baby will get   some of the opioids as well. And that doesn't  mean that we can't give it. It just means that   we need to be aware to assess both mom and baby's  well-being when giving opioids. Remember that the   antidote for opioids is naloxone. Naloxone is  the only antidote for acute opioid toxicity.   And we're going to assess that because mom is  having respiratory changes or changes in level of   consciousness. Big one's going to be if I am not  breathing enough. So usually, we say 10 or less   than 10 breaths a minute. That is going to be our  big sign there that we might have opioid toxicity.  There's other ways that we can relieve pain that  you don't see as often elsewhere. Inhalation.   So there are medications such as nitrous oxide,  sometimes called laughing gas, which can be   delivered through the inhalation route, so usually  with a mask or something similar. These are really   great because they're reversible immediately. So  as soon as mom starts breathing regular air again,   the effects are going to go away. This was very  popular at one point. It is making a little bit   of a comeback, and it is still very popular in  some other countries as well. It's a great way to   relieve pain for patients who don't want opioids.  Maybe they just don't want to take them or they   are in opioid recovery. But it's a really great  option for helping to kind of give that patient   a little bit of dissociation from the pain. And then we have regional anesthesia.   So these are going to be the things that  you think of the most when you think of   pain relief for labor. So regional, meaning it  is going to affect a certain region of the body,   not the whole body, which would be systemic. So  regional, this is going to be something like your   epidural or a spinal. An epidural is going to be a  catheter that is inserted into the epidural space,   right? And it allows for medication  to be administered into that space,   and it's going to basically provide pain relief  from the belly down. It's also going to cause some   weakness, loss of sensation, loss of strength.  So this is not something where I would want to   have my patient have an epidural and then just  leave them alone and never check on them, right?   I wouldn't want to do that with any patient, but  you understand what I'm saying. This is something   where I need to make sure that my patient is being  moved frequently, offered toileting, that kind of   experience because I don't want her to be lying  motionless in that bed and unable to move.  Now, we also have spinals. And we'll talk a  little bit more about that in the next card,   but it is slightly different. We have local  infiltration. I would say that you're not going to   see this as much, except for if the provider needs  to do an episiotomy and make a cut or suture,   a cut or a tear in the perineum. Then we would  use lidocaine to locally infiltrate that area and   numb it up. And then we have the pudendal nerve  block. So if you remember the pudendal nerve,   that's going to be innervating the genitalia,  essentially. So this is going to be providing   pain relief in the low vagina, in the vulva, the  perineum, in that sort of general area, but it's   not going to affect the belly or any of those  contraction pains. So this can be helpful also   for patients who are having an episiotomy or some  kind of local procedure in the genital region.  Now, this card here, we're talking more about  epidural and spinal blocks. Now epidurals,   like I said, it's going in the epidural space,  typically between L3 and L4. But there's one big   side effect that you just have to know because  you need to be able to assess your patient,   and that's going to be maternal hypotension.  Any time you hear epidural, I need you to think   blood pressure. I need to check my patient's  blood pressure. So I need to know what their   blood pressure was before. I need to  know what it is now. And typically,   we may even give fluids, IV fluids, before  administering the epidural so that we can help to   increase the intravascular volume and increase the  blood pressure so that there is less of a block.   This is going to provide that pain relief,  usually from the level of the umbilicus down.   But it's not going to necessarily get rid of all  sensation. It may just kind of turn the dial down.  Now, a spinal block is a little bit different.  This is actually going to be administered into   the cerebrospinal fluid in the subarachnoid space.  And this is a one-time injection. There's not a   catheter where I can keep putting medicine in.  It's a one-time injection, and this is typically   used for C-sections. So it's a limited window that  it's going to work, but it is going to take away   pain and sensation from the nipples down. So much  larger, right, of an area than the epidural from   the belly down. So we're getting a lot more pain  relief and an absence of sensation there. For me,   personally, I felt no pain whatsoever, but I  could feel pressure. So that was kind of a weird   sensation. I could not move my feet. I could not  feel any sort of severe surgical pain or anything.   But when they did go to pull my children out, I  felt a lot of pressure. So not pain but pressure.   This also can cause hypotension in your patients.  So remember, we're checking that blood pressure.  Now, if I saw that mom just got an epidural  or spinal and started to have hypotension,   what can I do about it? Well, we talked about one  intervention already, right? IV fluids need to   increase. Give a fluid bolus that's going to get  their blood pressure back up. But another thing we   can do is reposition the patient, right? Optimal  blood flow. So we're going to put the patient   on their side, and that's going to relieve that  pressure of the uterus on the inferior vena cava.   But also, I can't really do that if my  patient is getting a C-section right now.   So we may just have to place a pillow under the  hip. And we always want to have a pillow under the   hip because of that compression of the vena cava. All right. I hope that review was helpful. If   it was, please go ahead and like this video  so that I know. And if you have a great way   to remember something, I really want to hear  it. So please be sure to leave me a comment.   I hope I see you in the next one. Happy studying. I invite you to subscribe to our channel and share   a link with your classmates and friends in nursing  school. If you found value in this video, be sure   and hit the like button, and leave a comment and  let us know what you found particularly helpful.