“…Epidural anaesthesia was performed for surgery in all the studies except one (Rapp‐Zingraff et al, 1997), where a combined spinal epidural technique was performed. The local anaesthetics used were bupivacaine 0.5% (Eisenach et al, 1988; Rapp‐Zingraff et al, 1997) or 0.75% (Cohen and Woods, 1983; Coombs et al, 1982; Rosen et al, 1983), or lidocaine 2% with epinephrine (Carmichael et al, 1982; Celleno et al, 1991; Harrison et al, 1988; Palmer et al, 2000; Rosen et al, 1983) or chloroprocaine (Youngstrom et al, 1982). EM injection was performed before surgery, concomitantly with the local anaesthetic injection (Celleno et al, 1991; Coombs et al, 1982), 10–20 min after the last epidural injection of local anaesthetic for surgery (Youngstrom et al, 1982), at the time of umbilical cord clamping (Harrison et al, 1988), just after delivery (Eisenach et al, 1988; Palmer et al, 2000), at the time of skin closure (Carmichael et al, 1982), as the patients were admitted to the recovery room (Rapp‐Zingraff et al, 1997), at the first patient's complain of pain (Rosen et al, 1983), or 1 h after the end of surgery (Cohen and Woods, 1983).…”