Correlative analysis of different treatments of persistent occipitotransverse position on the outcome for mother and infant

Author:

Lin Chunxia1,Zhou Jun1,Mao Shengyan1,Tang Jia1,Qiu Guangyin1,Zheng Zhaoping1,Wang Litao1,Lin Jie1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Obstetrics The First People's Hospital of Longquanyi District Chengdu Sichuan China

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo explore the clinical feasibility of different treatment methods for persistent occipitotransverse position and the influence on maternal and infant complications.MethodDuring the trial of vaginal delivery from April 2020 to March 2023 in our hospital, the cervix was fully dilated and the presentation was located at +2 station. Ninety‐six pregnant women with fetal presentation at +4 station, occipitotransverse fetal position, maternal complications, abnormalities in the second stage of labor, and or fetal distress were divided into two groups: 65 patients with Kielland forceps vaginal delivery and 31 patients underwent emergency cesarean section. The delivery time, vaginal laceration rate, postpartum blood loss volume, puerperal infection rate, neonatal birth injury rate, and neonatal 1 min Apgar scores were analyzed.ResultsThe delivery outcomes and maternal and neonatal complications of 96 pregnant women were analyzed: the application of Kielland forceps delivery time was shorter, while the vaginal laceration rate, postpartum hemorrhage, puerperal infection rate were significantly lower than that of patients undergoing emergency cesarean section and the neonatal 1 min Apgar score was higher than that of emergency cesarean section group (p < 0.05).ConclusionIt was clinically appropriate to use Kielland forceps in vaginal delivery when the persistent occipitotransverse position was present and delivery needed to be expediated. Use of Kielland forceps can shorten the delivery time, improve the success rate of vaginal delivery and reduce the complications of mothers and infants.

Publisher

Wiley

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