9. •Shifirin & Cohen(1998):
1.Disorders of dilatation:
a. Prolonged latent phase
b. Protracted active phase
c. Secondary arrest
2.Disorders of descent:
a. Failure of descent
b. Protracted descent
c. Arrest of descent.
11. Early diagnosis
1. Partogram: In active phase
Alert line: drawn from cervical dilatation
on admission ,at a rate of 1 cm /h
Action line: drawn 2 h to the right of alert
line (Philpott,1972).
2. Nomogram (Studd,1973):
labor stencil: a series of curves from patient
admission cervical dilatation to 10 cm.
12.
13.
14.
15. Prevention
O,Driscol method of active
management of labor (1969)
• Diagnosis of labor
• 1 h: ARM
• 2h:cervical dilatation <1 cm /h:
oxytocin drip
16. Prolonged latent phase
Define
Freidman: > 20 h in PG, > 14 h in MG
from onset of labor (difficult to determine)
Philpott:> 6h in PG , > 4h in MG from
admission in labor.
Incidence
PG: 4% MG: 1%
17. Etiology
1. Wrong diagnosis of labor
2.Excess sedation
3. An abnormal or high presenting part
4. PROM
5.Idiopathic.
Risks
are created by aggressive intervention.
If membranes are intact, no risk , only
maternal anxiety.
18. Treatment
True labor or not: PV, CTG, palpation of the
cervix & reexamine after 4h:
1.C stop or no cx changes: not in labor
2. C persist & no cervical changes: sedation.
3. C. persist & cx changes : ARM + Syntocinon
drip. A. In 85% labor will progress rapidly .
B.In 15% adequate C will not cause cx
dilatation. If after 4-8 h of syntocinon, the
cervix is not further dilated, CS.
19. Primary dysfunctional labor
Define
Cx. Dil. < 1cm/h before normal active phase has
been established
Incidence
PG: 20% MG: 8%
Etiology
1. Inefficient C.: the commonest
2. CPD: 1/ 3
3. Malpresentation or malposition
20. Risks
1. F. distress
2. Maternal fear & anxiety , dehydration &
acidosis
3. Incordinate u. activity.
Treatment
Exclude CPD, ARM + oxytocin drip.
15%: vag. Delivery
35%: instrumental delivery
50%: CS for F. distress.
21. 2ndry arrest of labor
Define
Active phase started normally( cervical
dilatation reached 5-7 cm ) then cervical
dilatation stop or slows significantly within 2 h
Incidence
PG: 6% MG: 2%
Etiology
1.CPD:50%
2. Malposition
24. Prolonged deceleration
phase
Define
Arrest or slow of cervical dilatation after 8 cm
(PG > 3h , MG > 1h)
Etiology
1. CPD 2. Uterine exhaustion
Risks
1. High incidence of shoulder dystocia
2. Forceps is difficult
Treatment
Syntocinon is not helpful. C.S.
25. Elnashar et al (2000) compared oxytocin
infusion alone & with propranolol in the
management of DL (Primary DL & 2ndry
arrest).
The study group (50 women) was given propranolol
I.V. in a dose of 2 mg to be repeated after one hour if
there was no response in cervical dilatation.
The control group (50 women) & the study group
received oxytocin infusion for at least 4 hours & for
maximum of 6 hours & if there was no response,CS
was done.
26. There were a significant differences in the drug-
delivery interval (2.2 vs 3.7 hours) & CS rate (20 vs
38 %) between the study & the control groups.
Between the two groups, no statistically significant
differences were observed in low Apgar scores or
incidence of admissions to the NICU.
Conclusion: Propranolol combined with
oxytocin infusion in management of DL safely
shortened the drug-delivery interval & reduced
CS rate.
28. Protocol
1.This approach to management is confined to
nulliparas.
2. Patient education during pregnancy: signs &
symptoms of labor
3.Strict criteria for diagnosis of labor:
painful uterine contractions as well as
complete effacement of the cervix,
ruptured membranes or
passage of blood stained mucous
The diagnosis of labor is made within 1 hr of
presentation.
29. 4.Each woman in labor is assigned to
trained professional companion.
5.Amniotomy within 1 hr of admission.
6.Strict criteria for diagnosis of abnormal labor
progress. partogram or labor graph.
7.Oxytocin high dose infusion:
if progress of labor is < 1 cm/h over 2 h.
Oxytocin infusion is begun at 6mu/min &
increased by 6 mu/min every 15 min until 7
C/15min. or 40 mu/min.
30. 8.Assess FHR by auscultation
intermittently Continuous electronic fetal
heart rate monitoring is used only if there is
me conium stained amniotic fluid
9.All methods of pain relief are freely
available.
10. C.S if no delivery12 hr post admission
or if fetal scalp ph sampling revealed fetal
compromise.
31. Benefits
1.Prevention of dysfunctional labor
2.Decrease the incidence of prolonged labor
from 30% to 7% (Boylan,1997)
3.Decrease incidence of operative delivery.
4. Decrease maternal infectious mrbidity
5.Decrease incidence of C.S to 4.8% (Lopez-
Zeno,1992).
Some found no decrease in CS rate (Fraser et
al,1993) & others found an increase in CS rate
(Boylan et al,1993).
32. Amniotomy for shortening
spontaneous labour
Fraser et al, The Cochrane Library, 2, 2001.
Routine early amniotomy is associated with
both benefits and risks.
•Benefits include a reduction in labor
duration( between 60 and 120 minutes) and
a possible reduction in abnormal 5-minute
Apgar scores.
33. •No support for the hypothesis that routine
early amniotomy reduces the risk of CS.
Indeed there is a trend toward an increase
in CS. An association between early
amniotomy and CS for fetal distress is
noted in one large trial.
This suggests that amniotomy should be
reserved for women with abnormal labor
progress.