Fetal Heart Rate Monitoring Flashcards
What contraction variables can be accurately measured by a pressure sensitive tocodynanmometer?
Registering the frequency of contractions, NOT the strength (external monitoring)
At what point are the mother and baby physiologically separated from each other?
With each contraction, for a few seconds (blood flow initially ceases when vessels are compressed)
What is the normal rate of uterine contraction?
5 contractions or less in 10 mins (avg over 30 mins)
What is tachysystole?
> 5 contractions in 10 mins (avg over 30 mins)
What is the mean FHR baseline? What would be considered tachycardia and bradycardia?
Normal= 110-160 bpm
Tachycardia: baseline >160
Bradycardia: baseline
What is the most common cause of fetal tachycardia?
Fetal infection (chorioamnionitis)
What is the normal variability of the baseline amplitude range of FHR?
amplitude of 6-25bpm (Moderate variability)
What causes early decelerations?
Head compression (normal, will be mirror image of contraction)
What causes variable decelerations? When would they be worrisome?
Umbilical cord compression (shoulder, deep V)
Worry if they are recurrent (>50% of contractions)
What causes late decelerations? What do they indicate if they are repetitive?
Uterine placental insufficiency (ominous)
Repetitive- Indicate low fetal pH and metabolic acidosis
What does a sinusoidal pattern indicate in FHR?
Fetal anemia
What is a normal reactive NST?
15bpm above baseline lasting 15 seconds, twice within a 20 minute period