Ruggenprik en borstvoeding?*
Uit een Australische studie blijkt dat vrouwen die voor de bevalling, tegen de pijn, een ruggenprik krijgen later wellicht meer problemen hebben met het geven van borstvoeding. Voor het onderzoek werden 1.300 zwangere vrouwen gevolgd. 93% van deze vrouwen koos voor borstvoeding. Van de vrouwen zonder ruggenprik gaf 75% hun baby’s nog borstvoeding na 24 weken, terwijl bij de vrouwen met ruggenprik dit percentage 53% was. Er lijkt meer en meer bewijs te komen dat er een verband is tussen de gebruikte pijnstillers en slaperige baby’s en moeilijkheden bij het borstvoeden.
Women
who have epidurals to relieve the pain associated with giving birth may have
difficulty breastfeeding, according to a new Australian study.
Researchers
from the University of Sydney examined 1,300 women who gave birth in 1997 and
found that, of the 93 percent who breastfed their babies in the first week,
those who had opted for epidurals were far more likely to have breastfeeding
difficulties.
While
three-quarters of the women who had no analgesia (painkillers) were breastfeeding
their children at 24 weeks, only 53 percent of women who had received epidurals
were breastfeeding at that time.
Women
who'd chosen epidurals during labor were also more likely to completely stop
breastfeeding prior to six months than women who opted out of pain relief.
"There
is a growing body of evidence that the fentanyl (painkiller) component of
epidurals may be associated with sleepy infants and difficulty establishing
breastfeeding," wrote the researchers, led by Dr. Siranda Torvaldsen.
"Whatever
the underlying mechanism, it is important that women who are at higher risk of
breastfeeding cessation are provided with adequate breastfeeding assistance and
support, both in the initial postpartum period and the following few months,"
they wrote.
Pat
O'Brien, spokesman for the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists,
said that while the study is "interesting" and needs further
investigation, a number of factors could have influenced Torvaldsen's findings.
O'Brien
said that women who choose not to have epidurals may naturally be more motivated
to persist in breastfeeding their babies. "Also, a lot of those women who
had epidurals also went on to have Cesarean sections which -- unless you have a
lot of support -- make it difficult to breastfeed because it's harder for women
to pick their babies up."
Torvaldsen's
study found that of the 416 women who opted for an epidural during childbirth,
172 also chose to give birth by Cesarean section.
### (Dec. 2006)