The “Fetal Reserve Index”: Re-Engineering the Interpretation and Responses to Fetal Heart Rate Patterns

Objective: Electronic fetal monitoring (EFM) correlates poorly with neonatal outcome. We present a new metric: the “Fetal Reserve Index” (FRI), formally incorporating EFM with maternal, obstetrical, fetal risk factors, and excessive uterine activity for assessment of risk for cerebral palsy (CP). Me...

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Veröffentlicht in:Fetal diagnosis and therapy 2018-02, Vol.43 (2), p.90-104
Hauptverfasser: Eden, Robert D., Evans, Mark I., Evans, Shara M., Schifrin, Barry S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective: Electronic fetal monitoring (EFM) correlates poorly with neonatal outcome. We present a new metric: the “Fetal Reserve Index” (FRI), formally incorporating EFM with maternal, obstetrical, fetal risk factors, and excessive uterine activity for assessment of risk for cerebral palsy (CP). Methods: We performed a retrospective, case-control series of 50 term CP cases with apparent intrapartum neurological injury and 200 controls. All were deemed neurologically normal on admission. We compared the FRI against ACOG Category (I-III) system and long-term outcome parameters against ACOG monograph (NEACP) requirements for labor-induced fetal neurological injury. Results: Abnormal FRI's identified 100% of CP cases and did so hours before injury. ACOG Category III identified only 44% and much later. Retrospective ACOG monograph criteria were found in at most 30% of intrapartum-acquired CP patients; only 27% had umbilical or neonatal pH
ISSN:1015-3837
1421-9964
DOI:10.1159/000475927