Abstract

Intrapartum fetal bradycardia necessitates immediate operative delivery. Our aim was to investigate the hypothesis that some non-reassuring fetal heart rate (FHR) patterns were present before the onset of terminal bradycardia in infants who developed subsequent brain damage. From a population-based study of 65,197 deliveries, 190 stillbirths, 115 neonatal deaths, and 136 neurologically high-risk infants were registered by the Miyazaki Perinatal Conference. There were 15 cases of neurologically high-risk infants born at >34 weeks of gestation exhibiting intrapartum terminal bradycardia. Focusing on the brain-damaged infants, we retrospectively analyzed FHR patterns for at least 1 h prior to the bradycardia. Brain damage (cerebral palsy [n = 11] and mental retardation [n = 2]) was diagnosed at 2 years old in 13 out of 15 neurologically high-risk infants. Two infants had bradycardia on admission. In the remaining 11 infants, FHR patterns were reassuring in six (55%) and non-reassuring in five (45%), including late decelerations (n = 4) and variable decelerations (n = 2). Clinically relevant factors in the non-reassuring group included intrauterine infection (n = 3), malpresentation with umbilical cord coiling (n = 1), and unknown causes (n = 1). Clinically relevant features in the reassuring group included cord prolapse (n = 1), vaginal breech delivery (n = 1), shoulder dystocia (n = 1), rupture of membranes (n = 1), and unknown causes (n = 2). More than half of the brain-damaged infants born at >34 weeks of gestation who exhibited intrapartum terminal bradycardia had unremarkable FHR patterns before abrupt-onset bradycardia. For those with non-reassuring patterns preceding bradycardia, intrauterine infection was the major sentinel event.

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