• Ann Fr Anesth Reanim · Dec 2014

    Case Reports

    [Epidural bleeding after labor epidural analgesia.]

    • K Bouattour, G Moyano-Tidou, A Le Gouez, S Martel-Jacob, and F-J Mercier.
    • Département d'anesthésiologie, hôpital Antoine-Béclère, groupe hospitalier Paris Sud, 157, rue de la Porte-de-Trivaux, 92140 Clamart, France.
    • Ann Fr Anesth Reanim. 2014 Dec 1;33(12):690-2.

    AbstractAnaesthetists often stand in the front line to manage postpartum neurological deficits, although epidural analgesia is rarely responsible for these complications. An epidural analgesia was performed to relieve pain during spontaneous labor in a 34-year-old parturient. An emergency C-section was subsequently required due to fetal heart rate abnormalities. Twelve hours after catheter removal, the parturient developed a severe right leg motor and sensory neurological deficit, predominant on L5 and S1 roots and diagnosed by a neurologist as a central nerve root injury. Lumbar MRI identified a non-compressive epidural bleeding in front of the L5 vertebral body. Epidural bleeding after labor epidural analgesia is a rare complication that may jeopardize the functional prognosis. It may be difficult in some cases to differentiate an upper plexus injury due to labor and delivery from a central epidural analgesia-related nerve root lesion. Fetal head compression at the pelvic brim may induce neurological deficits in several well-differentiated nervous territories, thus mimicking an anaesthetic-induced perimedullar radiculopathy.Copyright © 2014 Société française d’anesthésie et de réanimation (Sfar). Published by Elsevier SAS. All rights reserved.

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