
Prevention of Cerebral Palsy with Novel Hypoxia Index Composed of Fetal Heart Rate Deceleration
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
international journal of diabetes and metabolic disorders
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2475-5451
DOI - 10.33140/ijdmd.04.01.02
Subject(s) - bradycardia , cerebral palsy , medicine , supine position , heart rate , anesthesia , fetal heart rate , cardiology , fetus , hypoxia (environmental) , pregnancy , physical medicine and rehabilitation , blood pressure , chemistry , organic chemistry , biology , oxygen , genetics
Fetal brain damage develops after the loss of FHR variability followed by infantile cerebral palsy due to severe hypoxiain frequently repeated fetal heart rate (FHR) decelerations (transient bradycardia) or prolonged fetal bradycardia, wherenovel hypxia index is 25 or more, and it is prevented if the hpoxia index is 24 or less. The hypoxia index (HI) is the sum ofFHR deceleration durations (min) divided by the lowest FHR (bpm), and multiplied by 100 (Figure 1). The HI is calculatedby visual measurement, while it is also suitably calculated by computerized FHR monitoring. Cerebral palsy is preventedwhen HI is 24 or less with almost zero error probability in the delivery. The cases whose HI was 25 or more will developcerebral palsy, thus, it can receive early cerebral palsy trearments in neonatal stage. As late deceleration disappearedwhen the parturient woman changed her posture to lateral one from supine, a parturient woman is recommended to havelateral posture, when they notice the appearance of FHR deceleration during the delivery to disappear deceleration toprevent the increase of HI value. As the HI is adopted not only late deceleration, but also all decelerations and continuousbradycardia, fetal diagnosis will change to objective numeric FHR analysis from the monitoring with vague subjective FHRpattern classification.