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Fetal Heart Rate Pattern in Term or Near-Term Cerebral Palsy: A Nationwide Cohort Study

Authors :
Mitsutoshi Iwashita
Keiya Fujimori
Satoshi Toyokawa
Naohiro Kanayama
Junichi Hasegawa
Masahiro Nakao
Hideaki Suzuki
Tsugio Maeda
Tomoaki Ikeda
Akihito Nakai
Shoji Satoh
Asumi Okumura
Nanako Tamiya
Kiyotake Ichizuka
Source :
Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey. 76:261-263
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2021.

Abstract

Background It is crucial to interpret fetal heart rate patterns with a focus on the pattern evolution during labor to estimate the relationship between cerebral palsy and delivery. However, nationwide data are not available. Objective The aim of our study was to demonstrate the features of fetal heart rate pattern evolution and estimate the timing of fetal brain injury during labor in cerebral palsy cases. Study Design In this longitudinal study, 1069 consecutive intrapartum fetal heart rate strips from infants with severe cerebral palsy at or beyond 34 weeks of gestation, were analyzed. They were categorized as follows: (1) continuous bradycardia (Bradycardia), (2) persistently nonreassuring, (3) reassuring-prolonged deceleration, (4) Hon’s pattern, and (5) persistently reassuring. The clinical factors underlying cerebral palsy in each group were assessed. Results Hypoxic brain injury during labor (those in the reassuring-prolonged deceleration and Hon’s pattern groups) accounted for 31.5% of severe cerebral palsy cases and at least 30% of those developed during the antenatal period. Of the 1069 cases, 7.86% were classified as continuous bradycardia (n=84), 21.7% as persistently nonreassuring (n=232), 15.6% as reassuring-prolonged deceleration (n=167), 15.9% as Hon’s pattern (n=170), 19.8% as persistently reassuring (n=212), and 19.1% were unclassified (n=204). The overall interobserver agreement was moderate (kappa 0.59). Placental abruption was the most common cause (31.9%) of cerebral palsy, accounting for almost 90% of cases in the continuous bradycardia group (64 of 73). Among the cases in the Hon’s pattern group (n=67), umbilical cord abnormalities were the most common clinical factor for cerebral palsy development (29.9%), followed by placental abruption (20.9%), and inappropriate operative vaginal delivery (13.4%). Conclusion Intrapartum hypoxic brain injury accounted for approximately 30% of severe cerebral palsy cases, whereas a substantial proportion of the cases were suspected to have either a prenatal or postnatal onset. Up to 16% of cerebral palsy cases may be preventable by placing a greater focus on the earlier changes seen in the Hon’s fetal heart rate progression.

Details

ISSN :
15339866 and 00297828
Volume :
76
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....523ba59ae27aa962a79d66823c0e1976
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/01.ogx.0000751424.60417.40