Initiation of Labor - Go Time Signals
- Mechanical Factors: Uterine overdistension ā ācontractility.
- Fetal Endocrine Signals:
- Fetal Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal (HPA) axis maturation: āFetal cortisol ā āplacental Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone (CRH).
- Placental CRH: Positive feedback, āDehydroepiandrosterone Sulfate (DHEAS) ā āestrogens.
- Hormonal Shift: āEstrogen / āProgesterone Ratio
- Estrogen: āGap junctions (connexin-43), āoxytocin receptors, āprostaglandin (PG) synthesis.
- Progesterone: Functional withdrawal (altered receptor activity, not just ālevels).
- Prostaglandins (PGEā, PGFāα):
- Key for cervical ripening (PGEā) & myometrial contractions (PGFāα, PGEā).
- Synthesized in amnion, chorion, decidua.
- Oxytocin:
- āMyometrial contractility (via IPā/DAG pathway).
- Ferguson Reflex: Cervical stretch ā āoxytocin release (positive feedback).

ā Placental CRH acts as a "placental clock"; its levels rise exponentially in the third trimester, influencing the timing of parturition and fetal lung maturation.
Stages of Labor - The Parturition Path
- Stage 1: Cervical Dilation (True labor pains ā Full dilation 10 cm)
- Latent Phase: 0-4 cm (Primigravida: ~8h, Multigravida: ~5h)
- Active Phase: 4-10 cm (Dilation: P: ~1.2 cm/hr, M: ~1.5 cm/hr)
- Stage 2: Fetal Expulsion (Full dilation ā Fetal delivery)
- Duration: P: ~2h (epidural ~3h); M: ~1h (epidural ~2h)
ā Crowning: Biparietal diameter distends vulva; no recession.
- Stage 3: Placental Expulsion (Fetal delivery ā Placental delivery)
- Duration: 5-15 min (>30 min abnormal)
- Signs: Blood gush, cord lengthens, uterus firms & rises.
- Stage 4: Observation (1-4h postpartum)
- Monitor: Uterine tone, bleeding (PPH).
Mechanism of Labor - Baby's Exit Route
Sequential fetal movements for birth canal passage:
- Engagement: Fetal head's biparietal diameter passes pelvic inlet.
- Descent: Continuous downward movement throughout labor.
- Flexion: Fetal chin tucks to chest, presenting smaller diameter (suboccipitobregmatic).
- Internal Rotation: Occiput rotates anteriorly towards pubic symphysis.
- Extension: Head extends as occiput passes under pubic symphysis; crowning.
- Restitution: Head externally rotates to align with shoulders.
- External Rotation: Shoulders rotate into antero-posterior pelvic diameter.
- Expulsion: Anterior shoulder, then posterior shoulder, then body deliver.
š Mnemonic: Every Darn Fool In Rotterdam Eats Rotten Eggs (for the cardinal movements)

ā The Left Occipito-Anterior (LOA) is the most common and favorable fetal position.
Maternal Physiology & Pain Relief - Mom's Labor Load
- Maternal Physiology:
- CV: āCO (~50% 2nd stage), āBP. Risk: Supine hypotension.
- Resp: Hyperventilation ā resp. alkalosis. āOā consumption.
- Haem: Physiologic leukocytosis (WBC up to 25k-30k/mm³).
- GI: āGastric emptying (aspiration risk).
- Labor Pain Pathways:
- 1st Stage: T10-L1 (visceral - uterine/cervical).
- 2nd Stage: S2-S4 (somatic - perineal).
- Pain Relief in Labor:
- Non-Pharmacological: Lamaze, TENS, hydrotherapy, breathing.
- Pharmacological (Systemic):
- Inhalational: Entonox (50% NāO + 50% Oā).
- Opioids: Pethidine, Fentanyl (ā ļø neonatal resp. depression).
- Regional Analgesia (Most Effective):
- Epidural: Bupivacaine + Fentanyl. S/E: hypotension, ā2nd stage, headache.
- Spinal: C-section, rapid analgesia.
- Pudendal block: Perineal pain, episiotomy.
ā Epidural analgesia, while highly effective, is associated with an increased risk of instrumental delivery and a longer second stage of labor.
HighāYield Points - ā” Biggest Takeaways
- Ferguson reflex: cervical stretch ā oxytocin release (posterior pituitary).
- Oxytocin & Prostaglandins (PGF2α, PGE2): drive uterine contractions; prostaglandins also ensure cervical ripening.
- ā Estrogen/Progesterone ratio: sensitizes uterus to oxytocin.
- Stages of Labor: 1st (cervical dilation), 2nd (fetal expulsion), 3rd (placental delivery).
- Relaxin: aids cervical softening & pelvic ligament relaxation.
- Lightening: fetal head descent into pelvis, often pre-labor.
- CRH (Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone) from placenta also plays a role in timing parturition by increasing fetal cortisol which promotes surfactant production and lung maturity impacting prostaglandin synthesis indirectly.
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