I walked into the Labour ward begging for my epidural because I had been warned that if there was a shortage of anaesthetists they might not be able to give me one at short notice... So I wasn't going to risk it.. I ordered mine as a walked through the door... I had to wait two hours from 1cm to 3cm dilation before they would let me have one...
I was having irregular contractions, from 2 to 3 minutes from the moment I went into labour, so it was really exhausting, and the anaesthetist said he had never seen a woman sit so still through so many contractions...just because I wanted it in so bad... They can't put it in though seemingly unless it's between contractions ?
When they put it in it was fantastic, I had one of the modern mobile epidurals which aren't as strong as normal so you can still feel the contractions, and run off a drip so that it doesn't run out. But I was silly and was so tired, I immediately laid down on my side, so I ended up having contractions down one side and not the other, so they had to come back pull the needle out a bit and put it back in...None of this hurt or mattered though.
I believe the epidural saved my daughters life and mine too... Tia went into severe distress just all of a sudden and if it hadn't have been for the constant monitoring you have to have with the epidural they wouldn't have known until it was too late, plus I retained my placenta and started haemorrhaging badly...with the epidural in they just put another bag of a stronger solution up to give me a spinal block and rush me to surgery.
I've heard stories of people getting terrible migraines or back problems with their epidural, but I have two slipped disks in my lower lumber area and there was no problems after. Epidurals FTW...
