• Eur. J. Obstet. Gynecol. Reprod. Biol. · Nov 2011

    Cardiotocography as a predictor of fetal outcome in women presenting with reduced fetal movement.

    • Niamh Daly, Donal Brennan, Michael Foley, and Colm O'Herlihy.
    • National Maternity Hospital, Dublin, Ireland.
    • Eur. J. Obstet. Gynecol. Reprod. Biol. 2011 Nov 1; 159 (1): 57-61.

    ObjectiveTo examine the obstetric and perinatal outcomes of women presenting with reduced fetal movement (RFM) during the third trimester, specifically in relation to the diagnostic capacity of non-stress cardiotocography (CTG) used as the primary investigation in this clinical scenario.Study DesignThis was a retrospective population-based cohort study of pregnancy outcomes of all women ≥ 28 weeks' gestation with singleton pregnancies presenting during one calendar year with maternal perception of RFM, all of whom underwent CTG at presentation. Main outcome measures included: obstetric intervention (induction of labour, spontaneous vaginal delivery, operative vaginal delivery, emergency caesarean section), and perinatal outcome (subsequent perinatal death, low Apgar scores (<7(5)), neonatal resuscitation and NICU admission).ResultsIn all, 524 women presented with RFM and a live fetus, representing 7% of the antenatal obstetric population; 284 women (54%) were nulliparous. The reassuring CTG group comprised 482 (92%) women in whom initial CTG was reassuring and 15 (3%) where a repeat tracing within 1h was reassuring. The non-reassuring/abnormal CTG group (n=27, 5%) either underwent emergency delivery or comprehensive serial fetal assessment; this group had significantly higher rates of emergency caesarean delivery, neonatal resuscitation and NICU admission; the incidence of small-for-gestational-age infants did not differ significantly. No perinatal death occurred in either group following CTG.ConclusionNormal non-stress CTG is a reliable screening indicator of fetal wellbeing in women presenting with perception of RFM in the third trimester; abnormal pregnancy outcomes were more common when initial CTG was abnormal or persistently non-reassuring.Copyright © 2011. Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd.

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