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OB Labor and Delivery and Labor Complications

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Answer
Labor   defined by an increase in myometrial contractility resulting in effacement and dilation of the uterine cervix  
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Dilation and Effacement   Think of a barrel. The diameter enlarging is dilation, the height of the barrel is effacement.  
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Uterine contractions have two major functions   dilate the cervix and push the fetus through the birth canal  
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The three P's   The powers (forces generated by the contractility of the uterus), the passenger, and the passage  
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Tocodynamaometry (TOCO: a qualitative device)   Detects amount of force that a contraction generates  
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Time interval used to qualify contractions   10 minutes  
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Quantitative assessment of contractions   measurement of intrauterine pressure via internal pressure transducers (IUPC)  
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What is adequate labor?   No concensus criteria. Classicallly, 3-5 contractions in 10 min. IUPC 200-250 Montevideo units  
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Passenger/Fetal Variables that influence course of labor   Size (Macrosomia 4,500g), Lie (longitudinal axis of fetus to uterus), Presentation (vertex, breech, shoulder, compound), Position (relationship of presenting part n relation to the pelvis), Station (measure of descent through birth canal)  
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Breech   butt is down (head down is vertex)  
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Compound   Somthing else slips on top (i.e. hand)  
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When Station value is zero   head at the level of ischial spines (if above, value is negative, if lower, then positive)  
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Fetal Lie   Transverse, Oblique, Longitudinal (Optimal)  
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Cord prolapse can occur in which lie?   Transverse  
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External Cephalic Version (ECV)   ECV involves the application of pressure to the mother’s abdomen to turn the fetus. Routinely done after 36 weeks  
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Passage (Pelvis)   Bony Pelvis, Soft tissues of birth canal (cervix, pelvic floor muscles). Both provide resistance to fetal expulsion  
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Pelvic Shapes   Gynecoid (ideal), Anthropoid, Android (least ideal), Platypelloid  
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Cardinal Movements of Labor   Engagement, Descent, Flexion, Internal Rotation, Extension, External Rotation (restitution), Expulsion  
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Stages of Labor   First Stage (onset of labor to full dilation: 10cm), Second Stage (interval between full dilation to delivery), Third Stage (Delivery of the placenta)  
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Pain Management Options in Labor   Parenteral: most common Fentanyl PCA (maternal risk for aspiration and respiratory depression as well as with fetus); Regional: epidural offers the most effective pain relief (less effective on fetus, may slow down labor but does not increase risks of C-s  
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Most common reason Narcan is used at delivery   In a fetus who has been exposed by mom to Fentanyl PCA (IV pain relief). Fetal risk to Fentanyl PCA is respiratory Depression  
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Dystocia of Labor   Characterized by the slow, abnormal progression of labor. Leading indication of primary c-sec. 1/10 births is a C-sec. 60% of ALL c-sec in the US are attributable to the diagnosis of dystocia  
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Protraction disorder   Labor slower than normal  
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Arrest disorder   Complete cessation of progress  
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Risks for prolonged labor   older, HTN, DM, Obesity, Macrosomia, Prolonged rupture of membranes and/or chorioamnionitis, short maternal structure, high station at complete dilation, occiput posterior position, pelvic abnormalities  
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latent phase   onset of contractions to active labor (3-4 cm). In Nulligravada, >20hours is too long. Multiparous>14 hrs is too long  
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Protracted dilation   not increasing dilation 1-2cm/hour  
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Induction of labor   Iatrogenic stimulation of uterine ctx’s to achieve vaginal delivery before onset of spontaneous labor. In the US, 20.6% of all births.  
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Indications for induction of labor (either maternal/fetal, or for logistic)   Gestational HTN or PIH, Preeclampsia, eeclampsia, postterm pregnancy, maternal medical conditions, fetal compromise (i.e.growth restriction), PROM, chorioamnionitis, Hx of rapid labor, distance from hospital.  
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CI to Induction of labor   prior classical c-section, active genital herpes, placenta or vasa previa, umbilical cord prolapse, transverse lie  
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Most common reason for induction   HTN, DM (b/c baby is usually large)  
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PROM   Premature Rupture of Membranes  
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Best tool to predict likelihood of successful labor induction   Bishop score. Scores >/= 6 are favorable. Cervix characteristics: Position, consistency, effacement, dilation, baby's station  
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Methods of Labor induction   Cervical Ripening Agents (prostaglandins such as misoprostol), Membrane Stripping - increases prostaglandin release, Oxytocin, Mechanical dilation - foley bulb w/ or w/out oxytocin, Amniotomy-AROM  
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AROM   artificial rupture of membranes  
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If you have dilation of the cervix but no effacement, you may need   Cervical Ripening Agents  
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Do not use Prostaglandins in   VBAC (prior c-section)  
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Indications for operative vaginal delivery (use of vacuum or forceps to help with second stage of labor). Head must be engaged and cervix must be fully dilated   Suspicion of immediate or potential fetal compromise (fetal distress), shortening of second stage for maternal reason, Prolonged second stage (nulliparous: no progress for 2-3 hrs, multiparous: no progress for 1-2 hours)  
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Shoulder Dystocia   delivery that requires additional maneuvers following failure of gently downward traction on the fetal head to effect delivery of the shoulders. Complicates .6-14% of deliveries  
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Risk factors for Shoulder Dystocia   maternal obesity, diabetes, hx of macrosomic infant, current macrosomia, hx of shoulder dystocia  
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Warning signs for Shoulder Dystocia   Anticipation is key! Prolonged 2nd stage, recoil of head on perineum (turtle sign), lack of spontaneous restitution  
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Fetal Complications with Shoulder Dystocia (4-40% of deliveries complicated with shoulder dystocia)   common injuries include brachial plexus injury, clavicle fracture, and humerus. <10% have permanent injuries. Increased risk of asphyxia  
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Maternal Complications with Shoulder Dystocia   11% risk of postportum hemorrhage, 3.8% risk of 4th degree laceration  
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3 common maneuvers used to tx shoulder dystocia   McRobert's Maneuver (dorsiflexion of hips against the abdomen), Episiotomy, Suprapubic pressure. (Others: Rubin's Screw, Wood's Screw, Delivery of posterior shoulder, Zavenilli)  
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Most common procedure performed in obstetrics   Episiotomy. No evidence supports routine use.  
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Two types of episiotomy   Midline (most common in US; can progress to a 4th degree laceration). Mediolateral (common in Europe, harder to repair, more blood loss, more sexual dysfunction, less risk for 4th degree tear).  
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Typical pregnancy is 40 weeks. Anything beyond that is called   Postterm. Literature says past 42 weeks, but this is not practiced. Never let anyone go past 42 weeks  
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Most frequent cause of Postterm Pregnancy   Error in dating.  
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Risk of Postterm Pregnancy to Fetus   stillbirth, meconium aspiration, intrauterine infection, utero-placenta insufficiency (oligo)  
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Most common risk factors for Postterm Pregnancy   First pregnancy, and prior postterm pregnancy  
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Risk of Postterm Pregnancy to Mother   increased labor dystocia, perineal injury related to macrosomia, and c-section rate  
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Postterm Pregnancy Management: Antenatal Surveillance   Literature is inconsistent regarding both type and frequency, Options include: nontress test (NST), biophysical profile (BPP) or modified BPP (NST and amniotic fluid volume estimation), or contraction stress test (CST). Modified BPP most commonly done  
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