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Medline ® Abstract for Reference 44

of 'Occiput posterior position'

44
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Maternal and neonatal outcomes of successful Kielland's rotational forceps delivery.
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Stock SJ, Josephs K, Farquharson S, Love C, Cooper SE, Kissack C, Akolekar R, Norman JE, Denison FC
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Obstet Gynecol. 2013;121(5):1032.
 
OBJECTIVE: To estimate the rates of early neonatal and maternal complications in a consecutive series of successful Kielland's rotational forceps deliveries.
METHODS: This was a retrospective cohort study of consecutive cases of successful rotational forceps deliveries performed in singleton pregnancies at 36 weeks of gestation or more in a tertiary referral center in Scotland, UK, from 2001 to 2008 (n=873). We also compared outcomes associated with successful rotational forceps deliveries in 2008 (n=150) with those of nonrotational forceps delivery (n=873), ventouse delivery (n=159), spontaneous vertex delivery (n=3,494), and emergency cesarean delivery (n=947).
RESULTS: There was one stillbirth associated with a rotational forceps delivery. This was diagnosed before application of forceps. After rotational forceps deliveries, 58 of 872 (6.7%) of live-born neonates were admitted to the neonatal unit. Twenty-seven of 872 (3.1%) neonates had one or more complications that could be attributable to traumatic delivery and seven neonates (0.8%) hada diagnosis of neonatal encephalopathy. When compared with alternative methods of delivery over a single year, neonatal admission rates after delivery by rotational forceps deliveries (5 of 150 [3.3%]) were not significantly different from spontaneous vertex delivery (128 of 3,494 [3.7%; P=1.00]) or ventouse delivery (6 of 159 [3.8%; P=1.00]) and lower than emergency cesarean delivery (106 of 947 [11.2%; P=.002). Postpartum hemorrhage rates after rotational forceps deliveries (8 of 150 [5.3%; P=.008]) were lower than those associated with emergency cesarean delivery (142 of 947 [15.0%; P=.008]).
CONCLUSION: Rates of short-term neonatal and maternal complications after successful rotational forceps deliveries are low.
LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II.
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University of Edinburgh MRC Centre for Reproductive Health, Queen's Medical Royal, the Infirmary of Edinburgh, Little France, Edinburgh, UK.
PMID