A Second C-Section Without the First Birth Trauma: TAP Block and Opioid-Sparing Pain Control
The First C-Section Became a Painful Memory
Lily became pregnant with her second child in her 40s. One reason she had waited so long was the painful memory of her first cesarean delivery.
She was highly sensitive to pain. After her first C-section, uterine fundal massage was so painful that her body trembled whenever she saw medical staff approaching.
Even worse, she did not pass gas for three days after surgery. Walking, abdominal massage, and other methods did not help. Her abdomen became severely distended, with nausea, incision pain, pain during turning over, and pain even while lying flat.
Finally, doctors had to insert a gastric tube for gastrointestinal decompression. That experience became one of the darkest memories of her life.
Severe pain · Delayed gas passage · Abdominal distension · Gastric tube decompression · Strong fear of repeat experience
A Personalized Pain Plan for the Second Birth
During her second pregnancy, Lily and her husband visited several hospitals specifically asking about post-operative pain management and gas-passage support.
They eventually chose a hospital where Dr. Nan from Anesthesiology carefully listened to her first birth experience and promised to create a completely different plan.
Dr. Nan analyzed two key problems: Lily was extremely pain-sensitive, and she had previously experienced very slow return of bowel function. Therefore, the plan needed strong multimodal analgesia while avoiding medications that could inhibit intestinal movement, such as morphine.
- Severe pain during uterine massage
- Extreme fear of post-operative movement
- No gas passage for 3 days
- Severe abdominal distension
- Gastric tube decompression required
- Topical anesthesia before spinal puncture
- Spinal anesthesia during surgery
- TAP block after surgery
- IV analgesia pump
- Rectal analgesic support without morphine
What Is TAP Block?
TAP block stands for transversus abdominis plane block. Under ultrasound guidance, long-acting local anesthetic is injected into the nerve plane of the abdominal wall to block pain from the incision and uterine area.
For C-section recovery, TAP block can help cover the early painful period after surgery, including fundal massage and turning over. It does not significantly affect muscle strength, so early movement can be easier. Because it acts locally, it can also avoid some systemic side effects such as nausea and dizziness.
Dr. Nan selected a very fine 0.7 mm nerve block needle. Although the technique required cooperation between two anesthesiologists during medication injection, the trauma was minimal. Because the TAP block was performed after the cesarean surgery while the abdominal wall was still anesthetized, Lily did not feel the puncture pain.
"Happy childbirth is not just a slogan. It can be achieved through technology."
— Dr. Nan
The Result — Rapid Gas Passage and Almost No Pain
After surgery, fundal massage no longer caused severe pain. Her pain score was controlled within the range of no pain to mild pain. Turning over was also comfortable.
Most importantly, Lily passed gas quickly. There was no severe abdominal distension, no nausea, and no need for a gastric tube.
Lily feared repeating the severe pain and delayed bowel recovery from her first C-section.
Dr. Nan used spinal anesthesia, TAP block, and opioid-sparing multimodal analgesia.
She had rapid gas passage, minimal pain, and no abdominal distension crisis.
"The same C-section, but a completely different experience. I never imagined gas passage could happen so smoothly after birth."
— Lily
Lily's story shows that the post-operative experience after cesarean delivery depends greatly on anesthesia and pain-management planning. For mothers with previous painful birth experiences, communicating clearly with the anesthesiology team can help create a safer, more comfortable recovery plan.