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Henci GoerFind out what other moms-to-be are asking.  Join in the discussion with Henci Goer, an expert in obstetric research. If you would like to contact Henci outside of the Ask Henci forum, send an email to Goersitemail@aol.com.

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Reply To Topic Topic: Reasons for stalled labor
:
Posted By Henci Goer, BA on 15 Jan 2009 10:57 PM

I don't know if she would have had a vaginal birth had she agreed to labor augmentation, and some studies have found that it increase s the likelihood of scar rupture, although not by a large amount. (See below: one large study reported a rate of 4 per 1000 with spontaneous labor and 9 per 1000 when oxytocin is given to strengthen contractions.) It sounds like she had the same problem she had the first time: a malpositioned baby. So last time she had an epidural and IV oxytocin (Pitocin is the brand name in the U.S.) and had a c/sec. This time she tried no epidural, patience, and everything you and she could think of to coax the baby into a more favorable position, and that didn't work either. Frankly, it seems unlikely to me that more time or an epidural plus augmentation would have made a difference since that strategy didn't work the first time. In the long run, she was destined to have another cesarean. I think the key issue is how your client felt about the decision making process.  

As for the nonreassuring fetal heart rate pattern, it is true that abnormal patterns have a weak relationship with newborn outcomes and that there may be other reasons for some of them besides distress. Nonetheless, you have a situation where no progress has been seen for hours in a woman in active phase labor despite efforts to resolve the difficulty, and the baby's heart rate pattern is now less than optimal. Proceeding to a cesarean certainly seems a reasonable thing to do although it may have been possible to wait longer, which takes us back to how your client feels about the decision being the critical issue. I will add, too, that this obstetrician may have been using the term "emergency" in a different sense than we commonly think of it. Studies I have read not infrequently use the term "emergency" cesarean simply to mean "a cesarean during labor," as opposed to a scheduled cesarean, without regard to urgency. It is possible the obstetrician was using it in this sense.

-- Henci

Landon MB, Hauth JC, Leveno KJ, et al. Maternal and perinatal outcomes associated with a trial of labor after prior cesarean delivery. N Engl J Med 2004;351(25):2581-9.

 

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