Are your children’s vaccines up to date?

Set a reminder

Please or to access all these features

Childbirth

Share experiences and get support around labour, birth and recovery.

epidural

11 replies

chocbiscuits · 08/10/2008 22:36

If you have an epidural (which I didnt with Ds1), do you have to have continuous fetal heartbeat monitoring??? (strapped to a belt thing)?
just wondering..

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
RedOnHerBeheadedHead · 08/10/2008 22:38

yes you do - we did about this in ante-natal group - you are completely hooked up! One in your back, drip on your arm i think - also BP on your other arm and band around your belly.

RedOnHerBeheadedHead · 08/10/2008 22:39

i remember thinking god what a pallaver! (sp??)

chocbiscuits · 08/10/2008 22:44

yeh! sounds it

OP posts:
Pinkchampagne · 08/10/2008 22:44

Yes you do

cthea · 08/10/2008 22:49

You have the epidural (coming up on your shoulder for ease of access) which is topped up as needed via a syringe. The fetal monitoring can come on and off (e.g. if you need to move about, go to the loo, all seems fine and no need for constant monitoring).

Mintpurple · 09/10/2008 00:41

cthea is right if its a mobile epidural - intermittent monitoring, drip down (only leaving the cannula in your arm), up and about mobilising.

Some hospitals may be a bit more keen on monitoring, if its not a mobile epidural.

However, even with a mobile epi, you will probably get progressively less mobile as you have more top ups. Shouldnt be a pallaver though

TeenyTinyTorya · 09/10/2008 01:15

Same as Red - it was a nightmare.

godivas · 09/10/2008 13:23

yes you do, and it's a bit itchy too :-)

wasabipeanut · 09/10/2008 13:27

yes - I was induced then had epidural after my tens machine and breathing techniques strangely failed to cope with a chemical induction.

I do remember thinking to myself "can they actually attach any more lines to me??" I had so much fluid drip into me over the course of labour that my ankles swelled up to giant balloon proportions.

Really, it was freaky. All went away though eventually.

OneLieIn · 09/10/2008 13:29

yes you do and yes i did

frazzledoldbag34 · 09/10/2008 14:52

Yes, I think so.
Epidural is fabulous though and TBH by the time I got mine I was delighted to be made to lie down on the bed with the monitor on as was totally knackered from 12 hours (all night) pacing about the bloody delivery room doing the 'active labour' thing. Had managed to go from 4cm to um, 4cm in 12 hours of pacing, leaning, birthing ball rocking and bouncing etc (2nd baby too!)
Then had a lovely epidural, lovely pain free normal delivery, lovely baby. What's not to like?
sorry , the answer to your question was Yes!

New posts on this thread. Refresh page