Labor Analgesia and Its Impact on Maternal and Neonatal Outcomes: Balancing Benefits, Risks, and Unresolved Questions

Ismail, Muhammad Faraaz and Ismail, Nabeelah (2025) Labor Analgesia and Its Impact on Maternal and Neonatal Outcomes: Balancing Benefits, Risks, and Unresolved Questions. Asian Journal of Medicine and Health, 23 (2). pp. 62-73. ISSN 2456-8414

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Abstract

Background: Labor pain is a profound physical and emotional experience, driven by uterine contractions, cervical dilation, and fetal descent. Effective labor analgesia, widely used in modern obstetric care, alleviates maternal pain and reduces physiological stress, contributing to improved maternal and neonatal outcomes. Neuraxial techniques, including epidural, spinal, and combined spinal-epidural (CSE) analgesia, are considered the gold standard due to their superior efficacy and safety profile. Non-neuraxial methods, such as systemic opioids, nitrous oxide, and non-pharmacologic techniques, provide alternative options but vary in effectiveness and side-effect profiles. Controversies remain regarding the influence of analgesia on labor progression, delivery outcomes, neonatal health, and breastfeeding.

Objectives: This review evaluates the impact of labor analgesia techniques on maternal outcomes, including labor progression, mode of delivery, and postpartum recovery, as well as neonatal outcomes, such as Apgar scores, breastfeeding initiation, and long-term neurodevelopment. Additionally, it explores current controversies, highlights benefits and risks, and identifies areas for future research.

Methods: A structured narrative review was conducted using PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, Scopus, and Google Scholar to identify key or foundational studies. The review included randomized controlled trials, cohort studies, systematic reviews, and meta-analyses focusing on labor analgesia and maternal and neonatal outcomes. Data extraction centered on key themes, including maternal outcomes, neonatal outcomes, and analgesia techniques.

Findings: Neuraxial analgesia provides superior pain relief with minimal systemic side effects. However, it is associated with a prolonged second stage of labor and increased rates of instrumental delivery, mitigated by low-dose and programmed intermittent bolus techniques. While early observational studies suggested a link between epidural analgesia and increased cesarean section rates, more recent randomized controlled trials and meta-analyses indicate that when administered during the active phase of labor, epidural analgesia does not significantly increase cesarean rates. Non-neuraxial methods, such as systemic opioids and nitrous oxide, offer moderate pain relief but present risks of maternal sedation and neonatal respiratory depression. Neonatal outcomes, including Apgar scores and breastfeeding success, are generally unaffected by neuraxial analgesia, though transient sedation effects are observed with systemic opioids. Evidence gaps persist regarding the long-term neurodevelopmental impact of nitrous oxide and systemic opioids.

Conclusion: Labor analgesia is fundamental to modern obstetric care, significantly enhancing maternal satisfaction and childbirth experiences. An individualized, evidence-based approach is essential to balance effective pain relief with optimal maternal and neonatal outcomes. Further research is needed to clarify causation, explore novel analgesic techniques such as peripheral nerve blocks and programmed intermittent epidural bolus regimens, and standardize outcome reporting in obstetric anesthesia research. These advancements will ensure continuous improvements in maternal healthcare and labor pain management.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: STM Digital > Medical Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@stmdigital.org
Date Deposited: 04 Mar 2025 03:59
Last Modified: 04 Mar 2025 03:59
URI: http://elibrary.ths100.in/id/eprint/1910

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