Sporadic fetal heart rate accelerations during labour practically rules
out acidaemia; a case-control study.
Abstract
Abstract Objective: To determine the occurrence of sporadic and periodic
accelerations during labour and odds ratio, OR, for acidaemia. Design:
Case-control study. Setting: One regional and one university hospital.
Sample: Cardiotocograms, CTGs, from 295 neonates with cord blood pH
<7.05 born during the second stage of labour, 70 neonates with
cord blood pH <7.10 born during the first stage and 731
controls with pH ≥7.15. Method: The last 30-60 minutes of CTG recordings
before birth from 365 neonates born with acidaemia and from the
corresponding stage in labour for 731 controls were scrutinized. Main
outcome measures: Odds ratio with 95% confidence interval for acidaemia
at birth. Results: During the first stage, sporadic accelerations were
present in 16% of cases and 78% of controls; OR for acidaemia 0.05
(0.02-0.10). In the second stage the corresponding rates were 13% and
60%; OR 0.09 (0.06-0.14). Isolated periodic accelerations were
infrequent. A weak negative association with acidaemia was found in the
second stage; OR 0.51 (0.30-0.86), whereas it was not significant in the
first stage; OR 0.24 (0.04-1.4). Less than two sporadic accelerations
were associated with an increased risk of acidaemia despite normal fetal
heart rate variability (5-25 beats per minute, OR 10.3 (7.2-14.8)).
Conclusions: Sporadic accelerations indicate a very low probability of
acidosis but are absent in 40% of fetuses with normal pH during a 30-60
minutes second stage recording. Tweetable abstract: Sporadic, but not
periodic, accelerations indicate normal fetal pH. This should be a part
of CTG guidelines.