Anyone have experience being induced and not getting an epidural? I will be 42 weeks this weekend so if he doesn't come by then, I'm looking at an induction on Monday.
I had a med free birth in the hospital with my first and I'd like to do it again. But truthfully I cannot imagine anything more painful and I know the contractions are supposed to be harder without breaks. That scares me just as much as epidurals do!
I know I still have some time left...
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Re: Induction without epi?
I was induced first with cytotec as my cervix was no way near open or thin enough for the foley. The foley would have been my first choice.
After the cyctec, I was fully effaced but not having regular contractions. We did low dose Pitocin for 2 hours and then a trial of turing it off. After it was turned off, I continued to have regular contractions-- so if you are having to do Pit, this is an option that not many people try. It worked for me.
I was pain med free pretty much till the end. Not ideal, but not really that bad either.
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You are probably (hopefully!) bound to be at least somewhat favorable for an induction since you'll be 42 (and I am confident you will go before then!). Are you already taking evening primrose oil? Have you assessed the baby's position? (not vertex vs breech but anterior vs posterior). If I were facing induction and didn't wish to have an epi, I would have:
cervidil to ripen my cervix
foley catheter if not already dilated past 3cm
breaking water
I'd prefer all of that before pitocin, and if I had pitocin, I would make sure and insist that it be turned off once I was laboring on my own. But it'd be tied down by that point. I haven't done that so I don't know whether I could even get up once pitocin is turned off.
Hang in there!! What weeks were you with your first? An advantage for you is that this is not your first, and your body will labor more quickly this time and hopefully the least invasive induction methods will do the trick.
I went into labor on my own 4 days shy of 42 weeks after my water broke. However, the contractions were not strong or regular enough after several hours and my OB ended up putting me on Pit for the last 12 hours of my 18 hour labor. Yes, the contractions were intense but I never felt they were more than I could handle. Also, I never had the "one right on top of another" contractions until transition which I hear is normal anyway.
I do wish that I had 1. asked for the Pit to be turned off after labor really got started, and 2. asked that they tell me every time they upped the dosage because I'm pretty sure they increased it several times without my knowledge.
Even if you have to get Pit, don't feel like you automatically will need an epi!
It might be too late for you to find someone who can do this but I had a Mayan abdominal massage (induction massage) with DD2 at almost 40 weeks and she was born the next morning. I highly recommend it if you can find someone in your area who can do it.
A friend of mine recently did acupuncture to avoid being induced with meds and she also gave birth within 24 hours.
Unfortunately at 41w5d I still hadn't gone into labor so I agreed to induce but wanted to avoid pit. I planned to do AROM since my labor with LO1 had started with water breaking SROM, but my cervix wasn't favorable enough.
So we started pit with the agreement to be very low and slow with it. The midwives kept commenting that they didn't want to be too low and slow because it needed to progress. I let them know that as a STM I knew what real contractions felt like and would them know if I wasn't feeling progression.
After 2 hours I still wasn't feeling much and hadn't had much progression and told them to kick it up 1 more notch. Then it got intense and it felt like transition even though I was only 4cm. It continued like this till the end. It was a total of 9 hours. It was difficult; more so than the first but I did it with the support of my husband and sister and lots of focus and breathing.
Good luck with whatever you decide; you can do it!!!!
My first was a week late so while I didn't expect to be on time, I wasn't expecting to be this late!
I don't know what position this would be but my ob said he was facing one way but seemed to be low.
i agree with this. I was induced with pitocin with my first two due to stalled labor and the contractions were so intense that I got an epidural with both. With my third, I was induced with cervadil and went on to have a very fast and med-free delivery. Completely different experience and pain level than using pitocin. Good luck!
Get yourself to a chiropractor as much as possible between now and Monday. Also, see if you can squeeze in a prenatal massage. Spend some time really thinking about the impending birth and overcome any fears you may be having. And ditto to Evening Primrose Oil.
If you do have to be induced, opt for a very slow induction. Don't feel like you have to go in and get pumped full of Pitocin right off the bat! As we all know, the consequences of something that extreme are not pretty. Make sure the doctor is open to a minimal induction... they should opt for the least amount necessary and give your body time to respond before increasing a dosage.
I was induced due to slight preeclampsia. I was 39 weeks.
They inserted cervidil at 6pm on June 10th, and my daughter was born 2:36am on June 11th, not even 9 hours later.
My original "plan" was to be induced, they'd do pitocin in the morning, and I wanted an epidural.
How it happened was, the cervidil worked quicker than expected, crazy contractions started and my water broke (and I didn't really know it), and I progressed VERY quickly and had no time for an epidural, and boom...there she was!
My next child will be planned med-free from the start. I am SO glad that I didn't get the epidural even though I had wanted it!
I had an induction without epidural. I was, in fact, induced three different ways!
I was a week and a half late, and a high risk pregnancy (40 y.o., clotting factors, auto immune issues) so they had me go in for a scheduled induction. I went in on a Saturday afternoon and they started me with cytotec and then cervidil. Contractions started, and I dilated to 5 cm, but then after I fell asleep contractions slowed by morning to almost nothing.
Sunday morning, they took me off the IV (saline, hooked up at all times when I was actually on any medication) and broke my water. I started having much harder contractions and labored through the day, but did not progress much and again, by tthe next morning, contractions had slowed to nothing.
Monday morning at 9 they told me to order and eat breakfast, and then at 10:30 they hooked me back up to the IV (rolling stand so that I could remain fully mobile) and started the pitocin at an extremely low level. The pitocin ramped up slowly through the day (at its highest dosage, it was still only about 10% of what they would have started a woman on just a decade ago). I went into active labor by noon and then transition at about 3 p.m. which I did in a warm bath tub to help keep the pain at bay. By 4:30 I was out of the tub and transition eased off, and by 5:30 I gave birth to my litte girl.
Yes, transition sucked. It was awful. Psychologically it broke me. BUT. It was never ever so awful that I could have been convinced to put a needle in my spine. I never asked for an epi, I certainly didn't scream for one. The actual pushing and giving birth was nothing after transition, and to be honest, by the time I was holding my litte girl in my arms the memory of the pain of transition was already fading.
Yup this was exactly how it went for me.