Fetopelvic disproportion is any clinically significant mismatch between the size or shape of the presenting part of the fetus and the size or shape of the maternal pelvis and soft tissue. A 12-pound fetus trying to squeeze through a maternal pelvis that is only adequate for a 7-pound baby would be an example of fetopelvic disproportion. The problem of disproportion may be based strictly on size, or may be related to the way in which the fetus is trying come out. Occiput anterior is the usual position for a fetus and that position is generally the most favorable for negotiating the diameters and turns of the birth canal. Should a fetus attempt to come through the birth canal in the occiput posterior position, it is more difficult for the fetal head to negotiate the turns. If the fetus is small enough and the pelvis large enough, it can still deliver as a posterior. Otherwise, the fetal head will need to be turned to anterior, or a cesarean section performed. Some disproportions are relative, while others are absolute. The relative disproportions may allow for non-operative vaginal delivery, if labor is allowed to continue long enough and there is sufficient molding or re-shaping of the fetal head to allow it to squeeze through. In the case of absolute disproportion, no amount of fetal head re-shaping will allow for unassisted vaginal delivery, and it may not allow for a vaginal delivery at all. Even in the case of relative disproportion, that fact that eventually a fetus might squeeze through doesn't necessarily mean that continued labor is wise. Even if highly accurate measurements of the maternal pelvis and fetal size were possible (and they are not), it would still be difficult to predict in advance those who will deliver vaginally easily and those who will not. All measurements are essentially static, and do not take into account the inherent "stretchiness" of the maternal pelvis or the compressibility of the fetus. The pelvis is not a single solid bone, but is comprised of many bones, held together by cartilage and ligaments. During pregnancy, these soft-tissue attachments become more pliable and elastic, allowing considerable movement. Similarly, fetal tissues can be safely compressed, to a certain extent. For these reasons, trying to predict whether a dynamically-shaped fetus will fit through a dynamically-shaped pelvis, based only on static measurements, becomes nearly impossible. Can a basketball fit through a rubber band? Of course, it depends on how big the basketball is, how big the rubber band is, how inflated the basketball is, and how stretchy the rubber band is. Accurately measuring the size of the basketball and the rubber band won't answer all of those questions.
Clinical Pelvimetry
X-ray Pelvimetry In numerous studies since then, the usefulness of x-ray pelvimetry has been discredited to the point that x-ray pelvimetry is rarely performed today. The problem is not that the internal measurements cannot be assessed with reasonable accuracy, but that the measurements rarely have any clinical meaning. Vaginal delivery may still occur (and usually does) despite small measurements. Cesarean section may still be needed even if the internal measurements look acceptable. Finally, the most contracted of pelvises can usually be defined on clinical examination alone. Occasionally, x-ray pelvimetry is still used. One example could be a maternal history of pelvic deformity where the wisdom of allowing a vaginal trial of labor is in question.
Estimation of Fetal Weight Ultrasound estimates of fetal weight are based on formulas that weigh various fetal dimensions (biparietal diameter, abdominal circumference, femur length, etc.), then apply mathematical modeling to come up with an estimated fetal weight. Ultrasound estimates are considered by many to be the most accurate means of predicting fetal weight. Accuracy of ultrasound varies, but its predictions generally come within 10% of the actual birthweight two-thirds of the time, and within 20% of the actual birthweight in 95% of cases. That means that if ultrasound predicts and average-sized, 7 1/2 pound baby, that most of the time (95% of the time), the baby will weigh somewhere between 6 pounds and 9 pounds, and occasionally (5% of the time), the baby will weigh less than 6 pounds or more than 9 pounds. We would all prefer that ultrasound be more consistently reliable in its estimates of fetal weight. Clinical estimates by an experienced examiner, based on feeling the mother's abdomen, are, in some studies, just as accurate as ultrasound (in other words, somewhat reliable). Interestingly, some studies also demonstrate that the mother's guess about her own baby's size is also about as accurate as ultrasound, if she has delivered a baby in the past. If she hasn't, then her estimates are less accurate.
Progress of Labor |
OB-GYN 101: Introductory
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