Normal Labour & Delivery Flashcards
What is the process of normal labour?
- Normal labour = process in which the fetus, placenta and membranes are expelled via the birth canal
- Normal labour is a process which occurs spontaneously at term (37-42 weeks)
What is Stage 1 of labour?
Stage 1:
Latent stage - Irregular contractions resulting in cervical dilataion of around 4cm
Established stage - Regular contractions resulting in cervical > 4cm
What is Stage 2 of labour?
Stage 2 = full cervical dilatation through to birth of baby
Passive 2nd stage = full dilatation of cervix bin the absence of expulsive contractions
Active 2nd stage = Presenting part is visible and expulsive contractions
What is Stage 3 of labour?
Time from birth of the baby to the expulsion of placenta and membranes
How is the progress of labour assessed?
Maternal monitoring - BP, Pulse, Temperature, Respiratory rate, O2 sats, urine output & urinalysis
Abdominal palpation - assess fetal lie, presentation, position & engagement
Vaginal examination - presentation, engagement & station, cervical dilatation, presence/absence of membranes
Monitoring Liqour - colour, smell, volume
Auscultate fetal heart - 120-160 BPM
Palpate uterine muscle contractions
What methods of anaelgesia and anesthesia are used during labour?
1) Breathing, massage, paracetamol, dihydrocodeine
2) Water
3) Entonox
4) Opioids (morphine, diamorphine)
5) Remifentanil
6) Epidural
What is thought to trigger labour?
- Paracrine and autocrine signals
What physiological changes occur to allow for expulsion of the fetus?
1) Cervix softens
2) Myometrial tone changes to allow for coordinated contractions
3) Progesterone decreases
4) Oxytocin and prostaglandins increase
When is stage 1 of delivery complete?
- Stage 1 is complete when the cervix has dilated by 10cm
How long should stage 1 for a primagravida and multigravida mother take?
- Primagravida = 8 hours
- Multigravida = 5 hours
How much should the cervic dilate per hour?
0.5-1cm/hour
How long after active 2nd stage starts should it take baby to be delivered in a primagravida and multigravida mother?
Primagravida = within 2 hours
Multigravida = within 1 hour
What machine is used to monitor the fetal heart rate?
Cardiotocogram
What are the possible fetal lie positions?
Longitudinal
Oblique
Transverse
What is meant by fetal presentation?
The part of the babies body which is directly above the pelvic inlet