College of Nursing, The University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona.
School of Nursing, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, Oregon.
J Midwifery Womens Health. 2024 Jul-Aug;69(4):499-513. doi: 10.1111/jmwh.13624. Epub 2024 Mar 20.
Efforts to reduce primary cesarean birth may include supporting longer second stages of labor. Although midwifery-led care is associated with lower cesarean use, little has been published on associated outcomes of prolonged second stage (≥3 hours of pushing) for nulliparous individuals in US hospital-based midwifery care. Epidural analgesia and the role of passive descent in midwifery-led care are also underexplored in relation to the second stage. In this study, we report the incidence of prolonged second stage stratified by epidural analgesia and/or passive descent. Secondary aims included calculating the odds of cesarean birth, obstetric anal sphincter injury (OASI), postpartum hemorrhage (PPH), and neonatal complications.
Data were collected prospectively from a single academic center in the United States from 2012 through 2019. Our cohort analysis of labors attended by midwives for nulliparous, term, singleton, and vertex pregnancies included both descriptive and inferential statistics comparing outcomes between prolonged versus nonprolonged pushing groups. We stratified the sample and quantified second stage outcomes by epidural analgesia and by use of passive descent.
Of the 1465 births, 17% (n = 247) included prolonged pushing. Cesarean ranged from 2.2% without prolonged pushing to 26.7% with prolonged pushing. Fetal malposition, epidural analgesia, and longer passive descent were more common among those with prolonged active pushing. Despite these factors, neither odds for PPH nor poor neonatal outcomes were associated with prolonged pushing. Those with more than one hour of passive descent in the second stage who also had prolonged active pushing had lower odds for cesarean but higher odds for OASI relative to those who had little passive descent before pushing for more than 3 hours.
Prolonged pushing occurred in nearly 2 of 10 nulliparous labors. Fetal malposition, epidural analgesia, and prolonged pushing were commonly observed with longer passive descent, cesarean, and OASI. Passive descent in these data likely reflects individualized midwifery care strategies when pushing was complicated by fetal malposition or other complexities.
为了降低初次剖宫产率,可能需要支持第二产程的延长。虽然助产士主导的护理与较低的剖宫产率相关,但在美国以医院为基础的助产士护理中,关于初产妇第二产程(>3 小时的用力)延长的相关结局,发表的内容很少。硬膜外镇痛和被动下降在助产士主导的护理中在第二产程的作用也没有得到充分探索。在这项研究中,我们根据硬膜外镇痛和/或被动下降,报告第二产程延长的发生率。次要目的包括计算剖宫产、产科肛门括约肌损伤(OASI)、产后出血(PPH)和新生儿并发症的几率。
数据是从 2012 年到 2019 年在美国的一个学术中心前瞻性收集的。我们对助产士接生的初产妇、足月、单胎、头位妊娠进行了队列分析,包括描述性和推断性统计,比较了延长与非延长用力组之间的结局。我们对样本进行分层,并根据硬膜外镇痛和使用被动下降来量化第二产程的结果。
在 1465 例分娩中,17%(n=247)包括用力延长。无延长用力的剖宫产率为 2.2%,有延长用力的剖宫产率为 26.7%。第二产程中胎方位不正、硬膜外镇痛和更长时间的被动下降在主动用力延长的产妇中更为常见。尽管有这些因素,用力延长与 PPH 或新生儿不良结局的几率都没有关联。在第二产程中被动下降超过 1 小时且主动用力延长的产妇中,与那些在 3 小时以上的时间内很少有被动下降然后用力的产妇相比,剖宫产的几率较低,但 OASI 的几率较高。
将近 2/10 的初产妇产程延长。胎方位不正、硬膜外镇痛和延长的用力与更长的被动下降、剖宫产和 OASI 有关。在这些数据中,被动下降可能反映了个体化的助产士护理策略,当胎方位不正或其他复杂性使用力复杂化时。