Abstract

To evaluate umbilical arterial lactate concentrations after spontaneous vaginal delivery and after elective Cesarean delivery, and to study the simultaneous effects of maternal and obstetric variables in high lactate levels in vaginally delivered healthy term singletons. The birth register study included information about the umbilical artery lactate values and clinical perinatal data from 7723 women and their singleton newborns (7301 spontaneous vaginal and 422 elective cesareans) from Kuopio University Hospital, Finland. High lactate levels were evaluated more extensively among healthy term neonates (N = 6541), to evaluate high levels after normal vaginal labors. The mean lactate level was significantly lower after elective cesarean compared to vaginal delivery (2.42 [0.94] vs. 3.56 [1.62] mmol/l; p < 0.0001). Consequently, the 90th percentile limit values were 3.60 and 5.80 mmol/L. Among healthy term newborns born vaginally, higher lactate values (≥5.80 mmol/L) were independently associated with a longer duration of the active second stage of labor (ORs 1.91-10.97) and duration of ruptured fetal membranes (ORs 1.36-2.46), higher gestational age at birth (ORs 1.41-1.86), null parity (OR 2.17), maternal infection (OR 1.81) and short maternal stature (OR 1.45). We report 90th/95th limits for umbilical arterial lactate values in relation to the various durations of labors for term newborns who are delivered by the vaginal route. Even though the high umbilical lactate levels may indicate serious birth asphyxia, levels after vaginal birth reflect the physiological stress and subclinical transient asphyxia frequently seen in normal vaginal deliveries.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call