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Process of fetal head descent as recorded by ultrasonography: How does this compare with the conventional first stage of labor?
International Journal of Gynaecology and Obstetrics 2021 January 19
OBJECTIVE: To construct an ultrasound partogram using serial transperineal sonographic measurements of the angle of fetal head progression during the first stage of labor, and to compare it with a conventional partogram based on digital vaginal examinations.
METHODS: Between 2017 and 2018, a prospective cohort study at Drum Tower Hospital, Nanjing, China, recruited 375 nulliparous women with singleton pregnancy and spontaneous onset of labor at 37 or more gestational weeks. Transperineal ultrasound scans were performed to measure the angle of progression (AoP) every 0.5-1 h until the second stage. Vaginal examinations were also used to measure cervical dilatation. Repeated-measures analysis was used to generate labor curves.
RESULTS: The labor curve generated by AoP had a pattern similar to that based on cervical dilatation. There was an initial slow period lasting approximately 5.5 h until the cervical dilatation or AoP reached the inflection point (4 cm and 119°, respectively), followed by a second, more rapid period, lasting approximately 2.5 h.
CONCLUSION: Based on ultrasound data, it was feasible to construct an "angle of progression partogram" of the first stage of labor, which was similar in pattern to the partogram based on cervical dilatation measured in the same cohort.
METHODS: Between 2017 and 2018, a prospective cohort study at Drum Tower Hospital, Nanjing, China, recruited 375 nulliparous women with singleton pregnancy and spontaneous onset of labor at 37 or more gestational weeks. Transperineal ultrasound scans were performed to measure the angle of progression (AoP) every 0.5-1 h until the second stage. Vaginal examinations were also used to measure cervical dilatation. Repeated-measures analysis was used to generate labor curves.
RESULTS: The labor curve generated by AoP had a pattern similar to that based on cervical dilatation. There was an initial slow period lasting approximately 5.5 h until the cervical dilatation or AoP reached the inflection point (4 cm and 119°, respectively), followed by a second, more rapid period, lasting approximately 2.5 h.
CONCLUSION: Based on ultrasound data, it was feasible to construct an "angle of progression partogram" of the first stage of labor, which was similar in pattern to the partogram based on cervical dilatation measured in the same cohort.
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