1. Maternal and neonatal outcomes associated with delivery techniques for impacted fetal head at caesarean section – systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
-
Rada, Maria Patricia, Ciortea, Răzvan, Măluțan, Andrei, Prundeanu, Ioana, Doumouchtsis, K. Stergios, Bucuri, Carmen, Blaga, Ligia, and Mihu, Dan
- Subjects
- *
CESAREAN section , *DELIVERY (Obstetrics) , *EXTRACTION techniques , *PREGNANCY complications , *BLOOD transfusion - Abstract
Late first-stage or second-stage caesarean section is commonly associated with fetal head impaction, leading to maternal and neonatal complications. This situation requires safe delivery techniques, but the optimal management remains controversial. The aim of this meta-synthesis was to compare maternal and neonatal outcomes associated with delivery techniques via caesarean section. Methodology. An electronic search of three databases, from inception to June 2021, was conducted. Cohort and randomized comparative studies on maternal and neonatal outcomes associated with techniques to deliver an impacted fetal head during caesarean section were included. The methodological quality of the primary studies was assessed. Review Manager 5.4 was used for statistical analyses. Nineteen articles, including 2345 women, were analyzed. Results. Three fetal extraction techniques were identified. Meta-analyses showed that the “pull” technique carries lower risks as compared to the “push” technique, and that the Patwardhan technique is safer compared to the “push” or the “push and pull” technique. Nine out of 11 quality criteria of the included studies were fully met. The “push” and the “pull” techniques were investigated by most included studies. The “pull” technique showed lower risks of blood transfusion (p=0.03), extension of uterine incision (p<0.00001), infection (p=0.003) and pyrexia (p<0.00001) compared to the “push” method. Conclusions. In the absence of robust evidence to support the use of a specific technique, the choice of the obstetrician should be based on best available evidence. Our study suggests that the “pull”, as well as the Patwardhan technique represent safe options to deliver an impacted fetal head. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022