When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Breech birth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breech_birth

    Complete breech presentation is the next most favorable position, but these babies sometimes shift and become footling breeches during labour. Footling and kneeling breeches have a higher risk of cord prolapse and head entrapment.

  3. Presentation (obstetrics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Presentation_(Obstetrics)

    Thus the various presentations are: cephalic presentation (head first): vertex —the most common and associated with the fewest complications; sinciput (forehead) brow (eyebrows) face; chin; breech presentation [1] (buttocks or feet first): complete breech; footling breech; frank breech; shoulder presentation: arm; shoulder; trunk

  4. Vaginal delivery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaginal_delivery

    Breech birth presentations occur when the fetus's buttocks or lower extremities are poised to deliver before the fetus's upper extremities or head. The three types of breech positions are footling breech, frank breech, and complete breech. These births occur in 3% to 4% of all term pregnancies. [31]

  5. Umbilical cord prolapse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umbilical_cord_prolapse

    The first sign of umbilical cord prolapse is usually a sudden and severe decrease in fetal heart rate that does not immediately resolve. On fetal heart tracing (a linear recording of the fetal heart rate) this would usually look like moderate to severe variable decelerations. [6]

  6. Caesarean section - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caesarean_section

    A breech birth is the birth of a baby from a breech presentation, in which the baby exits the pelvis with the buttocks or feet first as opposed to the normal head-first presentation. In breech presentation, fetal heart sounds are heard just above the umbilicus. Babies are usually born head first. If the baby is in another position the birth may ...

  7. Cephalic presentation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cephalic_presentation

    In the brow presentation, the head is slightly extended, but less than in the face presentation. The chin presentation is a variant of the face presentation with maximum extension of the head. Non-cephalic presentations are the breech presentation (3.5%) and the shoulder presentation (0.5%). [1]

  8. External cephalic version - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/External_cephalic_version

    External cephalic version (ECV) is a process by which a breech baby can sometimes be turned from buttocks or foot first to head first. It is a manual procedure that is recommended by national guidelines for breech presentation of a pregnancy with a single baby, in order to enable vaginal delivery.

  9. Position (obstetrics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Position_(obstetrics)

    In obstetrics, position is the orientation of the fetus in the womb, identified by the location of the presenting part of the fetus relative to the pelvis of the mother. . Conventionally, it is the position assumed by the fetus before the process of birth, as the fetus assumes various positions and postures during the course of chil