Abstract
The prevention of fetal asphyxia or hypoxia starts with prepregnancy counseling and continues with careful antenatal care and intrapartum fetal surveillance. Further progress in eliminating antepartum and intrapartum deaths will only be made when it is accepted that, even with intense investigation by detailed autopsy, the cause of many deaths remains unknown. Many of these deaths may be ascribed to hypoxia. In the future, with more detailed non-invasive probing with CAT scanning and magnetic resonance imaging, other causes may be determined. The mother at risk of hypoxia requires specialized attention. Such mothers will include those with severe cardiac, pulmonary or circulatory problems. Others will be those with endocrine problems, such as diabetes or thyroid dysfunction. At present, failure of fetal growth is generally ascribed to hypoxia, but undoubtedly, in solution to such problems of possible hypoxia is elective delivery at the appropriate time. What Hensleig said in 1986 (Hensleig et al, 1986) is equally true today: 'Preventative programmes will remain unsuccessful until the causation of cerebral palsy is more understood. What we are presently lacking is an understanding of the underlying conditions responsible for brain injury when asphyxia occurs despite our best efforts. While we have learned much about the causation and prevention of perinatal mortality very little has been established about the causation and prevention of cerebral palsy'. Finally, Hall (1989), in a review of birth asphyxia and cerebral palsy, concludes the following five points. 1. The incidence of cerebral palsy is not falling despite improved obstetrics. 2. The cause of more than 90% of cases of cerebral palsy remains unknown. 3. Asphyxia is hard to define and measure and is rarely the cause of cerebral palsy. 4. Hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy is the most reliable indicator of asphyxia. 5. Neither traditional clinical signs nor electronic monitoring allow reliable recognition of asphyxia.
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