학술논문

Deceleration area and capacity during labour‐like umbilical cord occlusions identify evolving hypotension: a controlled study in fetal sheep.
Document Type
Article
Source
BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology. Aug2021, Vol. 128 Issue 9, p1433-1442. 10p.
Subject
*UMBILICAL cord
*ACCELERATION (Mechanics)
*HYPOTENSION
*FETAL heart rate
*FETAL heart rate monitoring
Language
ISSN
1470-0328
Abstract
Objective: Cardiotocography is widely used to assess fetal well‐being during labour. The positive predictive value of current clinical algorithms to identify hypoxia‐ischaemia is poor. In experimental studies, fetal hypotension is the strongest predictor of hypoxic‐ischaemic injury. Cohort studies suggest that deceleration area and deceleration capacity of the fetal heart rate trace correlate with fetal acidaemia, but it is not known whether they are indices of fetal arterial hypotension. Design: Prospective, controlled study. Setting: Laboratory. Sample: Near‐term fetal sheep. Methods: One minute of complete umbilical cord occlusions (UCOs) every 5 minutes (1:5 min, n = 6) or every 2.5 minutes (1:2.5 min, n = 12) for 4 hours or until fetal mean arterial blood pressure fell <20 mmHg. Main outcome measures: Deceleration area and capacity during the UCO series were related to evolving hypotension. Results: The 1:5 min group developed only mild metabolic acidaemia, without hypotension. By contrast, 10/12 fetuses in the 1:2.5‐min group progressively developed severe metabolic acidaemia and hypotension, reaching 16.8 ± 0.9 mmHg after 71.2 ± 6.7 UCOs. Deceleration area and capacity remained unchanged throughout the UCO series in the 1:5‐min group, but progressively increased in the 1:2.5‐min group. The severity of hypotension was closely correlated with both deceleration area (P < 0.001, R2 = 0.66, n = 18) and capacity (P < 0.001, R2 = 0.67, n = 18). Deceleration area and capacity predicted development of hypotension at a median of 103 and 123 minutes before the final occlusion, respectively. Conclusions: Both deceleration area and capacity were strongly associated with developing fetal hypotension, supporting their potential to improve identification of fetuses at risk of hypotension leading to hypoxic‐ischaemic injury during labour. Deceleration area and capacity of fetal heart rate identify developing hypotension during labour‐like hypoxia. Deceleration area and capacity of fetal heart rate identify developing hypotension during labour‐like hypoxia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]