Fetal Monitoring Flashcards
Normal fetal heart rate
110-160 bpm
Fetal HR acceleration
Increase of at least 15 bpm from baseline for at least 15 seconds
Categories of fetal heart rate
Category I: Normal baseline + variability. No late or variable deccelerations. Reassuring.
Category II: Indicates careful observation. (ex, fetal tachycardia w/o deccelerations)
Category III: Ominous. Increased likelihood of severe fetal hypoxia or acidosis. (ex, absent baseline variability with recurrent or late variable deccelerations or bradycardia)
Profound or prolonged fetal bradycardia is an indication for. . .
. . . immediate Cesarean section
“Early” vs “Late” vs “Variable” deccelerations
Early: Benign, thought to be caused by fetal head compression.
Late: Concerning, suggest fetal hypoxia or (if recurrent) acidemia. May be an indication for immediate Cesarean section
Variable: Concerning, suggesting cord compression. Abrupt and steep drop and an equally abrupt and steep resolution, and do not occur with every uterine contraction.
Baseline heart rate measurement
- Approximate mean baseline rounded to units of 5 over a 10 minute period
- Excludes periodic or episodic shifts from baseline
- Represented as a single number, ie 145, 150, 155
Baseline heart rate by EGA
- <32 weeks: High normal (around 150’s) is usually observed. During this time period the sympathetic nervous system is more developed than the parasympathetic system, and so sympathetic tone predominates.
- 32 weeks and on: Heart rate gradually decreases in baseline due to rising vagal tone.
What to do when you aren’t sure if you’re hearing/seeing the maternal heart rate or the fetal heart rate
Palpate mom’s pulse or use an oximeter on mom’s finger
Degrees of variability
- Absent: None
- Minimal: <5 bpm variability
- Moderate: 6-25 bpm variability
- Marked: >25 bpm variability
What does fetal HR variability represent?
- Reflects oxygenation and demonstrates an intact pathway between cerebral cortex, midbrain, vagus nerve, and heart
- Moderate variability shows an intact CNS
- When there is hypoxia, variability gradually decreases and eventually becomes absent
- Important marker of fetal well-being
Potential etiologies of absent or minimal FHR variation
- Poor oxygenation
- Fetal sleep
- Arrhythmia
- Presence of certain anomalies
- Medications or substances
FHR Accelerations
- Visually abrupt increase in FHR above baseline
- Onset to peak ~30 seconds
- Definition: >15 bpm for >15 seconds
- Usually lasts ~2 minutes
- Measured during a non-stress test
FHR Accelerations in 28 - 32 week EGA
- Definition: > 10 bpm for > 10 seconds
- A bit more lenient than for >32 weeks
- As such, standards of the non-stress test are different:
- 2 accelerations within 20 minutes is reactive
- Give 60 minutes (instead of 40) before calling non-reactive
FHR Accelerations in <28 weeks EGA
There usually are none! Often too early in development.
When FHM is used on these fetuses, it is primarily to check for normal baseline and check if it is appropriate for the EGA.
Prolonged acceleration
Change in FHR lasting between 2-10 minutes (2 min being the max cutoff for normal acceleration)
Baseline change
Change in FHR lasting between >10 minutes
Early deccelerations
- Visually apparent GRADUAL decrease in fhr and return to baseline associated with contractions
- Onset to nadir is > 30 seconds
- Mirror image of contractions, uniform shape
- Normal vagal response to intrauterine head compression
- Completely benign
Mechanism of early deccelerations
- Fetal head is compressed within birth canal
- Intracranial pressure increases
- Cerebral blood flow changes
- Parasympathetic response
- Decreased fetal heart rate