Title: Direct experimental high-level evidence validates the importance
of classifying fetal heart rate decelerations into late (hypoxaemic) and
early (non-hypoxaemic)
Abstract
Birth-attendants monitoring labour need to discern fetal heart rate
patterns. A novel hypothesis that ‘timing of decelerations is a red
herring’ has strange attraction. Notwithstanding, this review uniquely
highlights direct empirical evidence that hypoxaemic decelerations are
late in timing and decelerations with early timing cannot be explained
by hypoxaemic chemoreflex. Deceleration size/shape/area disregarding
timing seem poor predictors of acidaemia. Recognising the majority
non-hypoxaemic-reflex decelerations (early) allows focus/attention to
potentially pathological ones. Fetuses tolerate limited degree/duration
of hypoxaemia. Currently, there aren’t safe/reliable biomarkers of fetal
decompensation. Therefore, persistent hypoxaemic (late) decelerations
should be differentiated, ameliorated, additional tests performed or
delivery expedited.