Alexandre Delgado , Geyson Marinho , Renato S. Melo , Filipe Pinheiro , Andrea Lemos
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction
Breathing appears to be an important outcome during labor. Therefore, this systematic review aims to evaluate, using the highest level of evidence, the benefits and potential risks of using breathing exercises during the first stage of labor on maternal and neonatal outcomes.
Methods
A search was conducted in the MEDLINE/PubMed, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), LILACS, PEDro, EMBASE, CINAHL, Web of Science, Scopus databases and gray literature was also searched, with no restrictions on period or language. The terms "Breathing Exercises" and "Labor" were used. Randomized and quasi-randomized clinical trials comparing a group using breathing exercises during the first stage of labor with a control group receiving usual care were included. The Cochrane tool (RoB 2.0) was used to assess the risk of bias, and the certainty of evidence was evaluated using the GRADE system. Quantitative analysis was performed through meta-analyses.
Results
Thirteen studies were included. There was a reduction in pain by -1.64 (95 % CI: -2.81 to -0.46, eight studies, I2 99 %; T2 2.82; p < 0.00001), based on very low certainty of evidence, and a reduction in the duration of the second stage of labor by -7.23 min (95 % CI: -11.08 to -3.38, three studies, random-effects: I2 0 %; T2 0.00; p < 0.0002), based on moderate certainty of evidence.
Conclusion
There is moderate evidence that the use of breathing exercises during the first stage of labor can reduce the duration of the pushing stage and decrease pain intensity, although with very low certainty of evidence. However, there was no difference in other maternal and neonatal outcomes.
期刊介绍:
The European Journal of Integrative Medicine (EuJIM) considers manuscripts from a wide range of complementary and integrative health care disciplines, with a particular focus on whole systems approaches, public health, self management and traditional medical systems. The journal strives to connect conventional medicine and evidence based complementary medicine. We encourage submissions reporting research with relevance for integrative clinical practice and interprofessional education.
EuJIM aims to be of interest to both conventional and integrative audiences, including healthcare practitioners, researchers, health care organisations, educationalists, and all those who seek objective and critical information on integrative medicine. To achieve this aim EuJIM provides an innovative international and interdisciplinary platform linking researchers and clinicians.
The journal focuses primarily on original research articles including systematic reviews, randomized controlled trials, other clinical studies, qualitative, observational and epidemiological studies. In addition we welcome short reviews, opinion articles and contributions relating to health services and policy, health economics and psychology.