Title: Operative Vaginal Delivery
1Operative Vaginal Delivery
District 1 ACOG Medical Student Teaching Module
2009
2- What Direct traction on the fetal head with
forceps or vacuum - Why Indications for vacuum and forceps are the
same (see next slide)
3Indications
- Maternal benefit
- Example certain maternal cardiac conditions
(Eisenmengers, pulmonary HTN) or history of
aneurysm/stroke - Concern for immediate/potential fetal compromise
- Example prolonged terminal bradycardia
- Prolonged 2nd stage
- Nulliparous no progress for 3 hrs w/epidural or
2 hours w/o epidural - Multiparous no progress for 2 hrs w/epidural or
1 hr w/o epidural
4What Do I Need To Know Before Attempting an
Operative Delivery?
- Presentation (Cephalic/Breech)
- Position (i.e. occiput posterior, sacrum
anterior) - Lie (longitudinal, oblique, transverse)
- Station
- Presence of asyncliticism
- Clinical pelvimetry
- Anesthesia
5Contraindications
- GA lt 34 weeks (contraindication for vacuum due to
risk of fetal IVH) - Known bone demineralization condition (e.g.
osteogenesis imperfecta) or bleeding disorder
e.g. VWD) - Fetal head unengaged
- Position of fetal head unknown
6Vacuum-Assisted Vaginal Delivery
- Do not apply rocking motion or torque, only
steady traction in the line of the birth canal - Stop after three pop-offs of vacuum, gt 20
minutes elapsed, three pulls with no progress
7After determining position of the head, (A)
insert the cup into the vaginal vault, ensuring
that no maternal tissues are trapped by the cup.
(B) Apply the cup to the flexion point 3 cm in
front of the posterior fontanel, centering the
sagittal suture. (C) Pull during a contraction
with a steady motion, keeping the device at right
angles to the plane of the cup. In
occipitoposterior deliveries, maintain the right
angle if the fetal head rotates. (D) Remove the
cup when the fetal jaw is reachable
8 Fetal Risks VAVD
Designed to detach if traction is excessive (but
can produce traction up to 50 lbs) 5 incidence
serious complications
- Scalp lacerations if torsion excessive
- Cephalohematoma limited to suture line
- Subgaleal hematoma crosses suture line
- Intracranial/retinal hemorrhage
- Hyperbilirubinemia/jaundice
- Higher incidence of cephalohematoma/retinal
hemorrhage/jaundice compared to forceps
9Type of Forceps Delivery
- Outlet forceps
- scalp visible at introitus w/o separating labia
- fetal skull reached pelvic floor head at/on
perineum - sagittal suture in AP diameter or LOA, ROA, or
posterior position - rotation does not exceed 45º
- Low forceps
- leading point of fetal skull at gt 2, not on
pelvic floor - rotation 45º or less (LOA/ROA to OA, or LOP/ROP
to OP) or rotation greater than 45º. - Midforceps
- above 2 cm but head engaged
- High forceps
- head not engaged not included in ACOG
classification - not recommended
10Forceps-Assisted Vaginal Delivery
- Identify apply blades
- Place instrument in front of pelvis with tip
pointing up pelvic curve forward - Apply left blade, guided by right hand, then
right blade with left hand - Lock blades
- Should articulate with ease
11FAVD
- Check for correct application
- Sagittal suture in midline of shanks
- Cannot place more than one fingertip between
blade and fetal head - Apply traction
- Steady, intermittent
- Downward, then upward
- Remove blades
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13Risks Forceps
- Maternal-
- Injury (extension of episiotomy, vaginal/cervical
lac) - Postpartum hemorrhage
- Fetal-
- Trauma
- Intracranial haemorrhage.
- Cephalic haematoma.
- Facial / Brachial palsy.
- Injury to the soft tissues of face forehead.
- Skull fracture
14Use of Alternative Instruments
- Highest risk for injury is for combined
forceps/vacuum extraction or cesarean delivery
after failed operative delivery - The weight of available evidence is against
multiple efforts with different instruments