Check out this abstract (summary) of a medical study- it seems that epidurals do cause problems for babies…
Birth 2001 Mar;28(1):5-12
Comment in:
·
Birth. 2001 Mar;28(1):20-1
Maternal analgesia during labor disturbs newborn behavior:
effects on breastfeeding, temperature, and crying.
Ransjo-Arvidson AB, Matthiesen AS, Lilja
G, Nissen E, Widstrom AM, Uvnas-Moberg K.
Division of Reproductive and Perinatal Health Care at the Department of Women
and Child Health, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
BACKGROUND: Newborns not exposed to analgesia, when placed on the
mother's chest, exhibit an inborn prefeeding behavior. This study was performed
to assess the effects of different types of analgesia during labor on the
development of spontaneous breastfeeding movements, crying behavior, and skin
temperature during the first hours of life in healthy term newborns. METHODS:
Video recordings were made of 28 newborns who had been dried and placed in
skin-to-skin contact between their mother's breasts immediately after delivery.
The video recordings were analyzed blindly with respect to infant exposure to
analgesia. Defined infant behaviors were assessed every 30 seconds. Group 1
mothers (n = 10) had received no analgesia during labor, group 2 mothers (n =
6) had received mepivacaine via pudendal block, and group 3 mothers (n = 12)
had received pethidine or bupivacaine or more than one type of analgesia during
labor. RESULTS: All infants made finger and hand movements, but the
infant's massagelike hand movements were less frequent in infants whose mothers
had received labor analgesia. A significantly lower proportion of group 3
infants made hand-to-mouth movements (p < 0.001), and a significantly lower
proportion of the infants in groups 2 and 3 touched the nipple with their hands
before suckling (p < 0.01), made licking movements (p < 0.01), and sucked
the breast (p < 0.01). Nearly one-half of the infants, all in groups 2 or 3,
did not breastfeed within the first 2.5 hour of life. The infants whose mothers
had received analgesia during labor had higher temperatures (p = 0.03) and they
cried more (p = 0.05) than infants whose mothers had not received any
analgesia. CONCLUSIONS: The present data indicate that several types of
analgesia given to the mother during labor may interfere with the newborn's
spontaneous breast-seeking and breastfeeding behaviors and increase the
newborn's temperature and crying.
PMID: 11264622 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]