20: Fetal Heart Monitoring Flashcards

1
Q

How often should you be intermittently monitoring a patient if pregnancy if uncomplicated?

A

q30 min in active phase of 1st stage of labor

q15 min in 2nd stage of labor

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2
Q

How often should you be intermittently monitoring a patient if pregnancy is complicated?

A

q15 min in active phase of 1st stage of labor

q5 min during 2nd stage

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3
Q

Which type of monitoring will provide more accurate tracings?

A

Internal monitoring

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4
Q

What is the normal pH of fetal scalp blood?

A

7.25-7.30

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5
Q

When is the pH of fetal scalp blood considered abnormal (fetal acidosis)?

A

pH < 7.20

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6
Q

What does the upper tracing in a fetal monitoring strip show?

A

FHR

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7
Q

What does the lower tracing in a fetal monitoring strip show?

A

Uterine contraction

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8
Q

Normal uterine activity

A

5 contractions in 10 minutes, averaged over a 30 minute window

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9
Q

Tachysystole

A

More than 5 contractions in 10 minutes averaged over a 30 minute window

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10
Q

Normal contractions

A

3 contractions in 8 minutes; contractions occurring every 2-3 minutes

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11
Q

MVUs

A

Montevideo units (measured by IUPC); the sum of contractions in a 10 minute period; need greater than 200 for at least 2 hours

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12
Q

Baseline FHR

A

Mean FHR rounded to increments of 5 bpm during a 10 minute segment. Assessed between contractions

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13
Q

Normal FHR baseline

A

110-160 bpm

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14
Q

Tachycardia FHR baseline

A

Greater than 160 bpm

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15
Q

Bradycardia FHR baseline

A

Less than 110 bpm

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16
Q

Most common cause of fetal tachycardhia

A

CHORIOAMNIONITIS/fetal infection

17
Q

Baseline Variability

A

Amplitude of the peak-to-trough in bpm of change in baseline rate

18
Q

Absent variability

A

Amplitude range undetected

19
Q

Minimal variability

A

Amplitude range detectable but less than or equal to 5 bpm

20
Q

Moderate (normal) variability

A

Amplitude range 6-25 bpm

21
Q

Marked variability

A

Amplitude range greater than 25 bpm

22
Q

Decreased variability

A

Can indicate possible fetal stress, especially ominous with late persistent decelerations; associated with hypoxia and acidemia

23
Q

Accelerations

A

Abrupt increase in FHR and NORMAL

24
Q

Non-reactive Stress Test

A

Heart rate of 15 or more bpm above baseline for 15 sec or more (but less than 2 minutes)

25
Q

Prolonged accelerations

A

Last 2 minutes or longer

26
Q

Deceleration

A

FHR decreases in response to uterine contractions

27
Q

Early decelerations

A

GOOD - secondary to head compression; nadir of deceleration occurs at same time as peak of contraction causing a “mirror” image on monitoring strip

28
Q

Variable decelerations

A

Secondary to umbilical cord compression; abrupt decrease in FHR that can occur at anytime on monitoring strip
Decrease more than 15 bpm lasting 15 sec-2 minutes

29
Q

“Shoulder” phenomenon

A

When slight increase in FHR is followed by major drop in FHR

30
Q

Late decelerations

A

BAD - Caused by uterine placental insufficiency. Most ominous deceleration - indicates fetal metabolic acidosis and low arterial pH; Nadir of deceleration occurs after the peak of the contraction

31
Q

Prolonged decelerations

A

Decrease in FHR from baseline that is more than 15 bpm lasting over 2 minutes but less than 10 minutes; commonly seen during maternal pushing

32
Q

Sinusoidal pattern

A

Smooth sine wave like pattern in FHR with 3-5 cycles per minute; NOT good - associated with fetal anemia

33
Q

Baseline 110-160 bpm, moderate variablity, no late/variable decelerations

A

Category I

34
Q

Intermittent variable decelerations or recurrent decelerations; tachysystole

A

Category II

35
Q

Absent baseline variability, recurrent late decels, recurrent variable decels, bradycardia, sinusoidal pattern

A

Category III