Monitoring your Baby’s Heartbeat in Labour - Milton Keynes University Hospital (2024)

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This leaflet is designed to give you information about how we care for your unborn baby while you are in labour. It will describe the benefits and disadvantages of different types of fetal monitoring, and aims to answer some of your questions.

Why monitor my baby’s heartbeat?
During labour, contractions reduce the blood flow to the placenta. This is normal and most babies cope without any problems. It is recommended that the heartbeat of all babies is monitored during labour because this provides information to your midwife or doctor on how well he or she is coping. It is important to recognise that no kind of monitoring is perfect. There will always
be a few babies who have problems in labour that monitoring will not recognise.

How is monitoring done?
Your baby’s heartbeat can be monitored either at regular intervals (intermittent listening) or continuously (electronic fetal monitoring). Before starting any monitoring, the midwife or doctor will check your pulse rate as well as your baby’s heart rate to make sure they can tell them apart.

Intermittent Auscultation
If you are healthy, have had no previous medical problems and have had a straightforward pregnancy, this is the recommended method of monitoring your baby’s heartbeat. Your baby’s heartbeat can be monitored using a Pinard stethoscope (a trumpet shaped device), which will enable the midwife or doctor to hear your baby’s heartbeat through your abdomen. More commonly a Doppler
(a battery-operated hand held electronic device), is used so that you can also listen to your baby’s heartbeat. If you plan to have a home birth intermittent auscultation is the only type of fetal monitoring available.

Once you are in established labour, the midwife will listen to your baby’s heartbeat for a full minute after a contraction every 15 minutes when you are in the first stage of labour, and every 5 minutes once we have determined you are in the second stage of labour until he/she is born. In hospital, your midwife will invite another midwife or doctor into your room every hour to perform an assessment of your baby’s heartbeat. This acts as a safety check and is called ‘fresh ears’.

Benefits of intermittent auscultation
• You can move around freely during your labour
• When pregnancy has been straightforward, intermittent auscultation reduces the chance of unnecessary intervention

Risks/disadvantages of intermittent auscultation
• Very sudden changes in your baby’s heart rate will not be detected. However, these are very rare in healthy babies.
• If there is concern about your baby’s heart rate continuous electronic fetal monitoring is advised.

Electronic fetal monitoring (EFM)
This form of monitoring means that your baby’s heart rate is monitored electronically using a cardiotocograph (CTG) machine which records your baby’s heartbeat on a paper printout. This is referred to as the “CTG” or “trace.” Two flat round sensors will be held in place by elasticated belts against your abdomen. One of these sensors detects the frequency and length of the contractions whilst the other detects the baby’s heartbeat. This is a painless procedure but sometimes restricts your mobility. The wires are long therefore you will still be able to move around, including sitting and standing, beside the monitor. There are cordless monitors which you may request (if available).

A continuous CTG will monitor your baby’s heartbeat throughout your labour. If everything appears normal and is low risk the doctor or midwife will advise you that we can revert to intermittent auscultation. Milton Keynes University Hospital has wireless CTG machines (telemetry) available to enable you to mobilise in labour. In some circumstances telemetry monitoring can enable you to use the pool during labour, but you should be aware that this is not suitable for everyone. Your midwife will be able to advise you.

Sometimes it can be difficult to monitor your baby’s heartbeat with abdominal sensors. In this circumstance, the midwife may consider applying a fetal scalp clip (FSE) to the baby’s head. This is done with your consent during a vaginal examination. A FSE connects to the CTG machine to monitor the baby’s heartbeat accurately. Midwives and obstetric doctors are trained to read and interpret features on the CTG trace to assess how well your baby is coping with your labour.

The midwives and doctors look at different elements of the CTG trace. These include the usual rate of the fetal heart (FHR), the amount the FHR changes each time it beats, whether the FHR increases or decreases, and the frequency and strength of contractions. These are all considered in relation to how the labour is progressing and any complications which may be present in pregnancy or labour. If there are concerns these will be referred to a more senior midwife or doctor and further tests may be offered.

It is normal for there to be changes in the pattern of the heartbeat, for example, when your baby is sleeping or moving around. Sometimes the sound disappears or the monitor stops showing the heart rate on the paper or visual display. This is usually due to the baby moving away from the sensor and does not necessarily mean that there is a problem. National guidelines recommend that the CTG trace is assessed hourly by a second midwife or a doctor. This is called ‘fresh eyes’. Your midwife will invite another midwife or doctor into your room to do this. The midwife will explain this to you but please ask if you would like more information.

Why is continuous monitoring necessary?
o Continuous monitoring may be performed for a short period or for the whole of your labour. If you have had problems in your pregnancy and the midwife and doctor have some concerns about how your baby will cope, they may recommend the use of a CTG in labour, care will be individualised to you and your baby’s needs.

If you have a health problem such as:
o Diabetes.
o Problems with your heart or kidneys.

Any factors relating to your current or previous pregnancy; for example:
o Your pregnancy has lasted more than 42 weeks.
o You have a twin/triplet pregnancy.
o You have previously had a Caesarean section.
o Your baby is small or premature.
o Pre-eclampsia (high blood pressure).
o Infection.
o A reduced amount of fluid around the baby has been seen on scan.

Any factors relating to your labour; for example:
o If when listening to the baby’s heartbeat, the midwife thinks there may be a problem, she/he will recommend continuous monitoring.
o You are having epidural analgesia (pain relief injected into your back).
o You have had bleeding from your vagina during or before labour.
o If your labour is induced (started artificially) you may need continuous monitoring
o If your labour is strengthened with a drip (oxytocin)

If baby passes meconium (opens bowels) before he/she is born we may recommend continuous monitoring, there may be other reasons for recommending EFM or you may request that your baby is continuously monitored. Your midwife or doctor will discuss this with you.

Advantages or benefits of EFM
• You will be able to see quite clearly the pattern of your baby’s heart rate.
• By continuously monitoring your baby’s heart rate the midwife or doctor can detect any concerns.
• EFM can be reassuring for both you and your birth partner
• EFM is very useful when there is an existing reason for the midwife or doctor to be concerned about your baby.

Disadvantages or risks of EFM
Your freedom of movement may be limited with EFM. Whilst different positions can be adopted in labour, continual monitoring may mean that a limited amount of mobilisation is possible.

What happens if a problem is suspected?
If the CTG shows a problem with the baby’s heartbeat, the situation will be reviewed and further action may be recommended. Sometimes simply changing your position can correct the problem.
If not, a test called fetal blood sampling can be done which involves taking one or two drops of blood from your baby’s scalp (through your vagina). This blood is tested for oxygen levels to show how your baby is coping with labour. The test can take between ten and twenty minutes. Sometimes the heart trace can make your midwife or doctor suspect that your baby is not coping well, when in fact they are fine. Fetal blood sampling helps to clarify this and may avoid you having an unnecessary Caesarean section.

If the heart rate does not improve or the blood result shows that your baby is distressed the doctor may suggest immediate delivery of your baby (sometimes by Caesarean section). There may be reasons why fetal blood sampling is not appropriate for you. Your midwife or doctor should discuss this with you.

Your choice
Your midwife/doctor will talk to you about your choice of methods of monitoring your baby’s heart rate with you and will explain any reasons as to why one method of monitoring may be preferred for your individual requirements.

Further information:
National Childbirth Trust – 0870 770 3236 – www.nct.org.uk NHS Choices – www.nhs.uk
Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists – www.rcog.org

The trust cannot be held responsible for the accuracy of non-government sponsored Internet sites in respect of any particular condition.

References:
National Institute of Clinical Excellence (2017) Intrapartum Care: Care of healthy women and their babies during Childbirth NICE: London available at www.nice.org.uk
Royal College of Midwives. (2012). Intermittent auscultation (IA) Evidence Based Guidelines for Midwifery-Led Care in Labour. The Royal College of Midwives 2012. Available at: www.rcm.org.uk
RCOG (2018) Improving fetal monitoring – www.rcog.org.uk

Monitoring your Baby’s Heartbeat in Labour - Milton Keynes University Hospital (2024)
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