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Failed Caesarean Section: An Obstetrician's Nightmare
Author(s) -
Yuen Pong Mo,
Yim So Fan
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
australian and new zealand journal of obstetrics and gynaecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.734
H-Index - 65
eISSN - 1479-828X
pISSN - 0004-8666
DOI - 10.1111/j.1479-828x.1997.tb02464.x
Subject(s) - cephalopelvic disproportion , caesarean section , obstetrics and gynaecology , medicine , obstetrics , fetal distress , vaginal delivery , cervix , labour ward , gynecology , pregnancy , fetus , genetics , cancer , biology
EDITORIAL COMMENT: In medicine, human judgment is fallible, but obstetrics is the discipline in which an error of judgment is most rapidly revealed, to the obstetrician, the patient and the labour ward staff, due to the unpredictability of the duration of labour and imminence of delivery in any individual patient. When the editor was a house officer he was called to the antenatal ward because a multipara, near term had abdominal pain. Vaginal examination revealed an undiluted cervix, but within the minute or so it took a walk to the handbasin to wash his hands the woman had delivered a live baby into the bed. It is always wise, and should be a routine. unless operating in haste for an emergency such as bleeding from placenta praevia, to perform a vaginal examination after anaesthesia is established before commencing Caesarean section in a woman in labour. The editor has performed many safe easy‐forceps deliveries in this circumstance, in theatre, in women in whom Caesarean section was planned for cephalopelvic disproportion with or without fetal distress. This finesse is more important if the consultant has agreed to perform a Caesarean on the findings recorded by others, but the fact remains that labour and delivery can accelerate most unexpectedly. We accepted this case report for publication, not merely because it is the first such case reported, but also for the opportunity it provided to stress to readers the need for final evaluation of the stage of labour before Caesarean section, when the conditions are most favourable for assessment. Nonetheless, as this case tells us. it is possible for labour and delivery to proceed faster than the obstetrician can perform a Caesarean section.