Do you think there's a connection between having the epidural and tearing? I read a lot of posts here and looks like a lot of you tore quite severely. I count my lucky stars because I didn't, apart from a minor episiotomy. I myself didn't get the epidural due to timing and I know most women get it so I thought it might be related. Like because your sensation down below is numbed the whole pushing gets out of sync from what's natural to your body and you may also not feel that you're tearing.
I ask this both out of curiosity but also because I thought that for the next pregnancy I'd take the epidural but I'm nervous about it. It scares me more than going med free after I successfully delivered that way the first time.
Re: Epidural and tearing
My epidural helped for pain but I was very aware of every contraction and need to push and could feel my legs and stand the entire time.
I also had an epidural and had a second degree tear. My recovery has been very well though. I didn't really know going in what is considered pushing for short/long amounts of time, but I pushed for 30 minutes total with taking breaks to give the doctor time to get in there. They told me they didn't expect her to come as fast as she did being a ftm, so I suspect that had something to do with my tearing.
increase the length of the pushing phase of labor
increase the likelihood of birth with vacuum extraction or forceps
reduce the likelihood of "spontaneous vaginal birth," that is, birth with neither vacuum extraction, nor forceps, nor cesarean section
increase the likelihood of maternal fever, which in turn increases the chance that the baby will have blood drawn to check for infection and will be given antibiotics through an IV (intravenous) line as a precaution
increase the likelihood of serious tearing of perineal tissue into or through the rectal sphincter — probably due to the increased use of vacuum extraction or forceps
can adversely affect newborn behavior compared with unmedicated infants
increase the likelihood of newborn jaundice (Leighton and Halpern 2002 and Lieberman and O'Donoghue 2002, systematic reviews
www.childbirthconnection.org
DS2: EDD- 09.08.17
Edit: pushed post too soon.