Antepartum and Intrapartum Fetal Assessment and Management

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jourdan E Triebwasser ◽  
Lori J Day ◽  
Deborah R Berman

Antenatal surveillance and intrapartum fetal monitoring are routine components of obstetric care, particularly in the high-risk patient. The goal of antenatal testing is to reduce stillbirths in pregnancies with heightened risk. The goal of intrapartum monitoring is to reduce fetal acidemia, which can lead to asphyxia and long-term neurologic sequelae. Both antepartum and intrapartum monitoring of the fetal heart rate and its variability are sensitive to acidemia. Standard nomenclature exists for describing the features of fetal heart rate tracing. Ultrasonography is a useful adjunct to fetal heart rate monitoring, particularly for antenatal testing. The decision to initiate antenatal testing or intrapartum monitoring depends on many factors, particularly gestational age and maternal status. All forms of surveillance have high false-positive rates and poor positive predictive value. If the results of abnormal testing will not affect clinical management, testing should not be performed. This review contains 9 figures, 7 tables, and 50 references. Keywords: acidemia, antenatal testing, assessment, biophysical profile, electronic fetal monitoring, labor and delivery, nonstress test, stillbirth

2014 ◽  
Vol 218 (02) ◽  
pp. 80-86
Author(s):  
V. Roemer ◽  
R. Walden

Abstract Background: Using the naked eye evaluation of fetal heart rate (fhr) patterns remains difficult and is not complete. Computer-aided analysis of the fhr offers the opportunity to analyze fhr patterns completely and to detect all changes due to hypoxia and acidosis. It was the goal of this study to analyze the factor time in fetal monitoring and to evaluate the association between the fhr and the actual pH values in arterial umbilical blood. Methods: During a period of 11 years the FHR signals (i. e., the R-R interval of the F-ECG) of 646 fetuses were recorded with a CTG and simultaneously by a computer. The computer files were analyzed thereafter, i. e., the results did not influence our clinical management. To enter the study, all fetuses must have been delivered by the vaginal route – in consequence without a significant loss of fhr signals. During forceps and/or vacuum deliveries recordings were continued. If necessary a new electrode was inserted. In this study recordings of fetuses with chorioamnionitis, tracings of malformed neonates and tracings shorter than 30 min were excluded. Thus 484 recordings were left. We used our own computer programs written in MATLAB (USA). 3 parameters were determined electronically: 1) the mean fetal frequency [fhf, (bpm)], 2) the number of turning points (N/min) in the fhr, which we called ‘microfluctuation’ (micro) and 3) the oscillation amplitude, oamp (bpm). Measurements of the acid-base variables from arterial (UA) and venous (UV) blood were performed using RADIOMETER equipment (ABL500) and trained personnel. However, only the actual pHUA values were used in this study. To detect the influence of hypoxia and acidosis, all 484 cases were separated into 7 groups according to the actual pHUA value: 55 fetuses lying in a small non-acidotic “pH-window” (pHUA=7.290–7.310, mean=7.300±0.008) were used as ‘controls’. Results: In humans fhf, micro and the oamp behave differently during the last 30 min of delivery and with different fetal pHUA values: micro is early (at 0 min) decreased with fetal acidemia and is steadily deceasing (68–40 N/min) during vaginal delivery; the oamp – mainly due to decelerations – is increased from 35 up to 70 bpm during the last 30 min. Hypoxia and acidosis increase the amplitude and duration of decelerations; finally fhf shows only an insignificant reaction to acidemia but is decreased (from 135 to 110 bpm) overall with the course of time. Therefore the 3 characteristics of the fhr might be ranged according to their decreasing sensitivity to acidemia as follows: 1) fetal microfluctuation, 2) oscillation amplitude and 3) mean frequency. The 3 components of the fhr were used to invent and apply a score named the WAS score. This score increases the association between the actual pHUA values and the activity of the fetal heart. The 3 variables of the fhr mentioned above were rated differently; the 3 factors necessary to achieve this were computed electronically using an optimization program. The result is the WAS score: WAS=mean [frq*ff(vj) * micro*fm (vj)/oamp*fa(vj)]j=1,30. Using the last 30 min of delivery the correlation coefficient r of this score with pHUA reaches 0.645, P<< 0.001. The regression is linear in our 484 cases. Conclusions: Microfluctuation is the most sensible variable of the fetal heart followed by the oscillation amplitude and mean frequency. The WAS score offers the best correlation with the actual pH values measured in arterial umbilical blood.


Author(s):  
Vikram Sinai Talaulikar ◽  
Sabaratnam Arulkumaran

The process of labour and delivery can be a hazardous journey for the fetus. The principal aim of monitoring a fetus during labour is to detect changes in the fetal heart rate that suggest a possibility of fetal hypoxia and metabolic acidosis so that timely action can be taken to prevent adverse outcomes. For the last four decades, intrapartum monitoring of fetuses has been commonly performed by either intermittent auscultation or electronic fetal heart rate monitoring (EFM). While intermittent auscultation has been the method of choice in low-risk pregnancies and in settings with limited resources, continuous EFM by cardiotocography has formed the mainstay of fetal surveillance in high-risk pregnancies in most of the high-resourced countries. The terminology, classification, and threshold for intervention with the use of EFM are discussed and adjunct technologies that support the use of EFM are also considered.


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