Fetal Monitoring Techniques - Initial Peeks
- Purpose: Evaluate fetal oxygenation & well-being during labor to detect hypoxia.
- Core Methods:
- Intermittent Auscultation (IA): Using Pinard or Doppler device.
- Electronic Fetal Monitoring (EFM): Continuous Cardiotocography (CTG).
⭐ Intermittent auscultation (IA) is suitable for low-risk labor; continuous EFM (CTG) is for high-risk cases or if IA is abnormal.
Fetal Monitoring Techniques - Heart's Language
- Assesses fetal well-being during labor. Key: Cardiotocography (CTG).
- CTG Components:
- Baseline Fetal Heart Rate (FHR): Normal 110-160 bpm.
- Variability: Beat-to-beat FHR fluctuations.
- Absent: Undetectable.
- Minimal: <5 bpm.
- Moderate: 5-25 bpm (reassuring).
- Marked: >25 bpm.
- Uterine Contractions: Frequency, duration.
- Accelerations: Transient ↑ FHR by ≥15 bpm for ≥15 sec (reassuring).
- Decelerations: Transient ↓ FHR (early, late, variable, prolonged).

⭐ Moderate variability (5-25 bpm) is the most reliable indicator of fetal oxygenation and an adequately functioning fetal CNS.
Fetal Monitoring Techniques - Rises & Dips
- Accelerations: Abrupt FHR ↑ (≥15 bpm for ≥15s if ≥32wks; ≥10 bpm for ≥10s if <32wks). Reassuring.
- Decelerations:
- Early: Gradual ↓, mirrors contraction. Cause: Head compression. Benign.
- Late: Gradual ↓, nadir after contraction peak. Cause: Uteroplacental insufficiency. Ominous.
- Variable: Abrupt ↓ (<30s onset to nadir), V/U/W shape. Cause: Cord compression.
- Prolonged: ↓ FHR ≥15 bpm, lasts 2-10 min.
- 📌 Mnemonic - VEAL CHOP:
- Variable → Cord Compression
- Early → Head Compression
- Acceleration → OK
- Late → Placental Insufficiency
⭐ Recurrent late decelerations signify uteroplacental insufficiency and are the most ominous pattern, strongly associated with fetal hypoxemia and acidosis.
Fetal Monitoring Techniques - FIGO's Verdict
The International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) 2015 guidelines provide a crucial three-tier classification system (Normal, Suspicious, Pathological) for Cardiotocography (CTG) interpretation. This system, based on assessing four primary CTG features, standardizes fetal monitoring during labor and guides management decisions.
- Baseline FHR: 110-160 bpm
- Variability: 5-25 bpm
- Decelerations: Type & frequency
- Accelerations: Presence
⭐ A sinusoidal pattern on CTG, characterized by smooth, regular oscillations, is a pre-terminal sign often linked to severe fetal anemia or asphyxia.
Fetal Monitoring Techniques - Deeper Dives
- Fetal Scalp Blood Sampling (FSBS):
- pH/lactate for acidosis if CTG unclear.
- Avoid: infections, bleeding risk, <34 wks.
- Fetal ECG (STAN): ST-analysis for hypoxia; CTG adjunct.
- Vibroacoustic Stimulation (VAS): Evokes FHR acceleration.
⭐ Fetal scalp blood pH < 7.20 or lactate > 4.8 mmol/L are critical thresholds indicating significant fetal acidosis, warranting immediate delivery.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Baseline FHR: 110-160 bpm; moderate variability (6-25 bpm) is reassuring.
- Accelerations (↑15 bpm, ≥15s post-32wks) are signs of fetal well-being.
- Early decelerations indicate head compression; late decelerations signal uteroplacental insufficiency.
- Variable decelerations result from cord compression; often resolve with maternal position change.
- Sinusoidal pattern is ominous, associated with severe fetal anemia or hypoxia.
- Reactive NST: ≥2 accelerations (15x15) in 20 minutes.
- Biophysical Profile (BPP): Score 8-10 is normal; assesses NST, breathing, movement, tone, AFI (Amniotic Fluid Index).
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