Augmentation and IOL
Augmentation and IOL
ON
AUGMENTATION
AND
INDUCTION OF LABOR
LABOUR
NUMBER OF STUDENT : 10
DATE : 22-01-2021
DURATION : 1 HOUR.
SPECIFIC OBJECTIVES:
At the end of the session the group will be able to:
Define augmentation and induction of labor
Enlist the purposes and induction of labor
Discuss the indications and contraindications of induction of labour
List the dangers of induction of labor
Explain the parameters to assess prior to the induction of labor
List the methods of induction of labor
Explain the medical induction of labor, common clinical condition’s ,
merits and demerits.
Describe the surgical induction of labour
Discuss the combined method of induction of labor
Explain the active management of labour
Discuss about the partograph
INTRODUCTION:
As the end of pregnancy nears, the cervix normally becomes soft (ripe) and
begins to open (dilate) and thin (efface), preparing for labor and delivery. When
labor does not naturally start on its own and vaginal delivery needs to happen
soon, labor may be started artificially (induced).
INDUCTION OF LABOR (IOL):
Induction of labor (IOL) means initiation of uterine contractions (after the
period of viability) by any method (medical, surgical or combined) for the
purpose of vaginal delivery.
AUGMENTATION:
Augmentation of labor is the process of stimulation of uterine
contractions (both in frequency and intensity) that are already present but found
to be inadequate.
6. Other positive factors Maternal height > 5'; Normal BMI, EFW
< 3 kg
1. Medical
2. Surgical
3. Combined
MEDICAL INDUCTION
DRUGS USED:
Prostaglandins PGE2, PGE1
Oxytocin
Mifepristone.
1. Prostaglandins:
Act locally (autocrine and paracrine hormones) on the contiguous cells.
PGE2 and PGF2α both cause myometrial contraction. But PGE2 is primarily
important for cervical ripening whereas PGF2α for myometrial contraction.
PGE2 has greater collagenolytic properties and also sensitizes the myometrium
to oxytocin. Intracervical application of dinoprostone (PGE2 – 0.5 mg) gel is the
gold standard for cervical ripening. It may be repeated after 6 hours for 3 or 4
doses if required. The woman should be in bed for 30 minutes following
application and is monitored for uterine activity and fetal heart rate.
Side effects:
Nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, pyrexia, bronchospasm, tachycardia and
chills
Cervical laceration may occur (PGF2α) when used as an abortifacient
Tachysystole (hyperstimulation) of the uterus, may occur during induction
and may continue for a variable period.
Risk of uterine rupture in cases with previous scar
2. Misoprostol (PGE1):
It is currently being used either trans-vaginally or orally for induction of
labour (ACOG 2003). Oral use of misoprostol is less effective than vaginal
administration. A dose of 25 µg vaginally every 4 hours is found either superior
or similarly effective to that of PGE2 for cervical ripening and labour induction.
With the above dose schedule, the risk of uterine hyperstimulation, meconium-
stained liquor and foetal heart irregularities are reduced. Total 6–8 doses are used.
Buccal and sublingual use of misoprostol can avoid the first pass hepatic
circulation and can maintain the serum bioavailability similar to that of vaginal
use.
Side effects are:
Tachysystole
Meconium passage and possibly uterine rupture.
It is contraindicated in women with previous caesarean birth.
3. Oxytocins:
It’s an endogenous uterotonic that stimulates uterine contractions. Oxytocin
receptors present in the myometrium are more in the fundus than in the cervix.
Receptor concentrations increase during pregnancy and in labor.
Oxytocin acts by:
a) receptor mediation
b) voltage-mediated calcium channels
c) prostaglandin production.
Because of short half-life (3-4 minutes) plasma levels fall rapidly when
intravenous infusion is stopped. Oxytocin is effective for induction of labor when
the cervix is ripe. It is less effective as a cervical ripening agent. Mifepristone
(progesterone receptor antagonists) blocks both progesterone and glucocorticoid
receptors. RU 486, 200 mg vaginally daily for 2 days has been found to ripen the
cervix and to induce labor. Onapristone (ZK 98299) is a more selective
progesterone receptor antagonists.
Mechanical methods: They are effective.
Advantages are low cost, low risk of tachysystole, disadvantages are infection.
COMMON CLINICAL CONDITIONS:
Intrauterine fetal death
Premature rupture of membranes
In combination with surgical induction (ARM).
Merits and Demerits of Oxytocin and Prostaglandins in Medical Induction
of Labour:
Features Oxytocin Prostaglandins (PGE2
, PGE1 )
Cost Cheaper PGE2 costly, PGE1 less
costly
Stability Needs refrigeration PGE2 needs
(may be kept for 1 refrigeration;PGE1 is
month at 30°C). stable at room
temperature
Administration Intravenous (IV) Intravaginally or orally
infusion
Effectiveness Less with: More effective in those
Low Bishop score cases as it has got more
IUFD collagenolytic properties
Lesser weeks of and it also sensitizes the
pregnancy myometrium to oxytocin
Side effects Uterine Low dose schedule has
hyperstimulation mainly got minimal side effects
with high dose (ceases Tachysystole may last
following stoppage of longer (may need Inj.
infusion) terbutaline 0.2 mg sc)
Systemic side effects Less; water intoxication Systemic side effects
may be troublesome
specially with oral or
intravenous infusion.
Vaginal route use has
got minimal side effects.
Antidiuretic (ADH) In high dose No such
effect
COMBINED METHOD
The combined medical and surgical methods are commonly used to
increase the efficacy of induction by reducing the induction-delivery interval. The
oxytocin infusion is started either prior to or following rupture of the membranes
depending mainly upon the state of the cervix and head brim relation. With the
head nonengaged, it is preferable to induce with prostaglandin gel or to start
oxytocin infusion followed by ARM.
Advantages of the combined methods:
1. More effective than any single procedure
2. Shortens the induction-delivery interval and thereby
minimizes the risk of infection
lessens the period of observation.
ACTIVE MANAGEMENT OF LABOR:
Active management of labor was introduced by O’Driscoll and his
colleagues in 1968 at National Maternity Hospital, Dublin. The term “Active”
refers to the active involvement of the consultant-obstetrician in the management
of primigravid labor. Active management applies exclusively to primigravidas
with singleton pregnancy and cephalic presentation who are in spontaneous labor
and with clear liquor. Husband or the partner is present during the course of labor.
Partograph is maintained to record the progress of labor.
Essential Components:
The essential components of active management of labor (AMOL):
Antenatal classes to explain the purpose and the procedure of AMOL
(prenatal education)
Woman is admitted in the labor ward only after the diagnosis of labor
(regular painful uterine contractions with cervical effacement)
One to one nursing care with partographic monitoring of labor
Amniotomy (ARM) with confirmation of labor
Oxytocin augmentation (escalating dose) if cervical dilatation is
Delivery is completed within 12 hours of admission
Epidural analgesia if needed
Fetal monitoring by intermittent auscultation or by continuous electronic
monitoring.
Active involvement of the consultant obstetrician.
The key to active management involves strict vigilance (one to one care),
active and informed intervention in time. The incidence of operative delivery is
not increased and less analgesia is required.
Aim: To expedite delivery within 12 hours without increasing maternal morbidity
and perinatal hazards.
Active management of labor:
Objective are:
early detection of any delay in labor
diagnose its cause and
initiate management.
Emotional support in labor:
Stress and anxiety during labor can make labor prolonged. Presence of a
supportive companion during labor (husband/female relative of choice) reduces
the duration of labor, need of analgesics and oxytocin augmentation. Such social
support is a low-cost useful intervention.
Stress-induced high levels of endogenous adrenalin is thought to inhibit
uterine contractions via stimulation of uterine muscle beta receptors.
Limitations of active management of labor:
It is employed only in selected cases and in selected centres where
intensive intrapartum monitoring by trained personnel is possible. It requires
more staff involvement in the antenatal clinic and labor ward.
Advantages:
1. Less chance of dysfunctional labor
2. Shortens the duration of labor (< 12 hours)
3. Fetal hypoxia can be detected early
4. Low incidence of caesarean birth
5. Less analgesia
6. Less maternal anxiety due to support of the caregiver and prenatal
education.
Contraindications:
1. Presence of obstetric complication
2. Presence of fetal compromise
3. Multigravida (not a routine).
PARTOGRAPH
Partograph is a composite graphical record of key data (maternal and fetal)
during labor, entered against time on a single sheet of paper. In cervicograph
(Philpott & Caste 1972), the alert line starts at 4 cm (WHO) of cervical dilatation
and ends at 10 cm dilatation (at the rate of 1 cm/hr). The action line is drawn 4
hours to the right and parallel to the alert line. In a normal labor, the cervicograph
(cervical dilatation) should be either on the alert line or to the left of it. When it
falls on Zone 2 it is abnormal and need to be critically assessed. When it falls in
Zone 3 case should be reassessed by a senior person. Decision is to be made either
for termination of labor (cesarean section) or for augmentation of labor
(amniotomy and or oxytocin).
Components of a partograph
They are:
1. Patient identification
2. Time-recorded at hourly interval. Zero time for spontaneous labor is the
time of admission in the labor ward and for induced labor is the time of
induction
3. Foetal heart rate is recorded at every 30 minutes
4. State of membranes and colour of liquor: to mark ‘I’ for intact membranes,
‘C’ for clear and ‘M’ for meconium-stained liquor
5. Cervical dilatation and descent of the head
6. Uterine contractions: the squares in the vertical columns are shaded
according to duration and intensity
7. Drugs and fluids
8. Blood pressure (recorded in vertical line) at every 2 hours and pulse at
every 30 minutes;
9. Oxytocin: concentration in the upper box and dose (m IU/min) in the lower
box
10.Urine analysis
11.Temperature record.
Advantages of a partograph:
1. A single sheet of paper can provide details of necessary information at a
glance
2. No need to record labor events repeatedly
3. It can predict deviation from normal progress of labor early. So,
appropriate steps could be taken in time
4. It facilitates handover procedure
5. Introduction of partograph in the management of labor (WHO 1994) has
reduced the incidence of prolonged labor and caesarean section rate. There
is improvement in maternal morbidity, perinatal morbidity and mortality.
SUMMARY:
Induction of labor means initiation of uterine contractions (after fetal
viability) for the purpose of vaginal delivery. Augmentation is the process of
stimulation of uterine contraction that are already present but found to be
inadequate. the Induction of labor should be done when benefits of delivery to
either the mother or the baby out-weigh the risks of pregnancy continuation. The
Indications and contraindications must be carefully judged to avoid the dangers
of induction of labor. the Methods of cervical ripening are many. Bishop’s
preinduction cervical score can predict the success of induction. Score ≥ 6 is
favourable. The Methods of induction may be medical, surgical or combined,
depending upon the individual case. Each method has got its merits and demerits.
the Induction of labor with sweeping of the membranes is effective. Combined
use of amniotomy (ARM) and IV oxytocin is more effective than ARM alone.
The Active management of labor needs some criteria to be fulfilled. It has many
advantages. the Partograph is a composite graphical record of labor events
(maternal and fetal) entered against time on a single sheet of paper. It has many
advantages. It can predict deviation from normal progress of labor early so that
early steps could be taken.
CONCLUSION:
By the end of the session , the group has gained in-depth knowledge
regarding augmentation and induction of labor and it is important to know the
methods of induction of labor and the drugs, surgical and combined methods.
Bibliography:
Books:
D.C dutta (2006) ‘Text book of obstetrics’ (6 th edition) new Delhi, new
central book agency ; page no.598-608.
Annama Jacob (2002) ‘Text book of comprehensive midwifery’ (2 nd
edition) new Delhi , jaypee brothers pvt ltd.
Journals:
https://www.jogc.com/article/S1701-2163(15)30842-2/fulltext.
https://www.jognn.org/article/S0884-2175(15)32489-8/fulltext.
website:
https://www.slideshare.net/imanswati/induction-and-augmentation-
og-labour-self-made.
https://www.slideshare.net/drjayeshpatidar/augmentation-of-labour