Shoulder Dystocia
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Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2004
Sep;191(3):874-8.
Randomized trial of McRoberts versus lithotomy
positioning to decrease the force that is applied to the
fetus during delivery.
Poggi SH, Allen RH, Patel CR, Ghidini A, Pezzullo JC,
Spong CY.
Georgetown University Hospital, Department of Obstetrics
and Gynecology, Washington, DC 20007, USA. shp2@gunet.georgetown.edu
Objectives:
In an effort to reduce shoulder dystocia
incidence and morbidity, some obstetricians use
prophylactic maternal hip hyperflexion (McRoberts
maneuver), with the hope of facilitating delivery and
decreasing the traction needed for delivery. The
objective of this study was to evaluate whether the
delivery force is reduced with the prophylactic
McRoberts maneuver in a prospective, objective manner.
Study Design:
Between April 2002 and July 2003, we
randomly assigned multiparous women with term, cephalic
singleton gestations to delivery in the lithotomy or
McRoberts position. A single physician used a
force-measuring system that consisted of a custom glove
with force sensors to record the amount of force that
was exerted on the fetal head. The primary outcomes of
the study were peak force (pounds; highest force needed
to accomplish entire delivery), peak force for delivery
of anterior shoulder (pounds), and peak force rate
(pounds per second; the duration required to reach the
peak force).
Results:
The peak force was not different
between the patients in the lithotomy position (n=13)
versus the McRoberts position (n=14; 7.2 +/- 0.8 lbs vs
8.0 +/- 0.7 lbs; P = .5). The peak force for delivery of
the anterior shoulder (6.7 +/- 0.8 lbs vs 7.1 +/- 0.7
lbs; P = .7) and peak force rate (32.3 +/- 7.0 lbs/sec
vs 29.1 +/- 3.5 lbs/sec; P = .7) were not different
between the patients in the lithotomy position versus
the McRoberts position, respectively. There was no
difference between the groups for gestational age, birth
weight, incidence of diabetes mellitus, or operative
vaginal delivery. The subjective degree of difficulty of
the delivery correlated with the peak force (R2 = 0.53;
P = .001).
Conclusion:
The use of the McRoberts maneuver
before clinical diagnosis of shoulder dystocia provides
no reduction in the force that is used in traction on
the fetal head during vaginal delivery in multiparous
patients. The acceptance of this maneuver to be used
prophylactically requires re-evaluation.