Abstract

BackgroundFetal movement (FM) counting is a simple and widely used method of assessing fetal well-being. However, little is known about what women perceive as decreased fetal movement (DFM) and how maternally perceived DFM is reflected in FM charts.MethodsWe analyzed FM counting data from 148 DFM events occurring in 137 pregnancies. The women counted FM daily from pregnancy week 24 until birth using a modified count-to-ten procedure. Common temporal patterns for the two weeks preceding hospital examination due to DFM were extracted from the FM charts using wavelet principal component analysis; a statistical methodology particularly developed for modeling temporal data with sudden changes, i.e. spikes that are frequently found in FM data. The association of the extracted temporal patterns with fetal complications was assessed by including the individuals’ scores on the wavelet principal components as explanatory variables in multivariable logistic regression analyses for two outcome measures: (i) complications identified during DFM-related consultations (n = 148) and (ii) fetal compromise at the time of consultation (including relevant information about birth outcome and placental pathology). The latter outcome variable was restricted to the DFM events occurring within 21 days before birth (n = 76).ResultsAnalyzing the 148 and 76 DFM events, the first three main temporal FM counting patterns explained 87.2% and 87.4%, respectively, of all temporal variation in the FM charts. These three temporal patterns represented overall counting times, sudden spikes around the time of DFM events, and an inverted U-shaped pattern, explaining 75.3%, 8.6%, and 3.3% and 72.5%, 9.6%, and 5.3% of variation in the total cohort and subsample, respectively. Neither of the temporal patterns was significantly associated with the two outcome measures.ConclusionsAcknowledging that sudden, large changes in fetal activity may be underreported in FM charts, our study showed that the temporal FM counting patterns in the two weeks preceding DFM-related consultation contributed little to identify clinically important changes in perceived FM. It thus provides insufficient information for giving detailed advice to women on when to contact health care providers. The importance of qualitative features of maternally perceived DFM should be further explored.

Highlights

  • Fetal movement (FM) counting is a simple and widely used method of assessing fetal well-being

  • The majority of pregnancies with perceived decreased fetal movement (DFM) continue without complication [5], maternal concern should be taken seriously because DFM has been linked to a wide range of adverse birth outcomes, including fetal growth restriction (FGR) and death [6,7,8,9,10]

  • This study reports data from the prospective Count with Me study initiated by the Norwegian Institute of Public Health in 2009 as part of the international Fetal Movement Intervention Assessment (FEMINA) research collaboration [2,3,4]

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Summary

Introduction

Fetal movement (FM) counting is a simple and widely used method of assessing fetal well-being. Little is known about what women perceive as decreased fetal movement (DFM) and how maternally perceived DFM is reflected in FM charts. The daily routine of FM counting may improve a woman’s ability to identify alarming changes in FM in a timely manner, enabling appropriate intervention if the fetus is at risk. This method is simple and feasible, its use remains controversial, mainly because no limit for clinically important DFM has been adequately defined [11,12]. No counting method or DFM limit has been proven to be superior to maternal perception of DFM [11,12]

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