Abstract

Labor induction is one of the main contributors of serious complication among mothers and babies. Prolonged artificial uterus muscle contraction may result in uterus hyper stimulation. One method of prevention is using the abdomen palpation technique. However, its practice has so far been less effective, less accurate, time consuming, and somehow subjective, as it requires meticulousness of the examiner. The WHO recommends that laboring mothers using induction technique should continuously be monitored. Therefore, there is a need for a much more accurate measure using a monitoring instrument that is capable of recording contraction. The instrument is electromyography. This research analyzed uterus electrical activities in stage I labor induction. The method used was observing 10 respondents undergoing labor induction for their contraction, every 15 minutes for 10 minutes each using electromyography. Monitoring results were then analyzed for frequency, duration, interval, and action potential, and these were presented as a trend. Results show a trend of frequency, duration, interval, and action potential of uterus contraction in stage I labor, with successful induction showing increasing rhythm, while failed induction indicating constant rhythm. Mean frequency, duration, interval, and action potential is 5.30 time/10 minutes, 55.89 seconds, 4.12 minutes, and 1.64 V respectively. Meanwhile, the 3 mothers with failed induction have mean frequency of 1.64x/10 minute, mean contraction duration of 21.74 seconds, and mean interval of 7.40 minutes, and mean action potential of 1.18 V.

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