Chapter 15: Nursing Care of A Family During Labor and Birth
Chapter 15: Nursing Care of A Family During Labor and Birth
2. Passenger (fetus)
a. Structure of the Fetal Skull
Cranium (upper, composed of 8 bones)
o 4 superior bones: frontal, 2 parietal and occipital
o Other 4 bones: sphenoid, ethmoid and 2 temporal bones
c. Molding
Overlapping of skull bones along the suture line, cause change shape of
fetal skull to long and narrow
Caused by force of uterine contractions
2. Fetal Lie
- relationship of long axis of fetal body to long axis of woman’s body
Note: long axis is considered cephalic
3. Fetal Presentation
- body parts that will first contact the cervix or be born first
Cephalic: most frequent; head; had 4 types ( vertex, brow, face and
mentum); vertex is ideal presenting
Breech: buttocks or feet; good attitude (knee flex); bad attitude (knee
extended); 3 types ( complete, frank and footling)
Shoulder: shoulder (acromion process), an iliac crest, hand or elbow
4. Fetal Position
- relationship presenting part of to specific quadrant off side of woman pelvis
Vetrex: occiput (O)
Face: chin/mentum (M)
Breech: sacrum (Sa)
Shoulder: scapula (A)
Abbreviation of position
1st letter: landmark is pointing mother’s right or left
2nd letter: fetal landmark (O, M, Sa, A)
3rd letter: landmark points anteriorly, posteriorly or transversely
Engagement- settling presenting part of fetus far enough into the pelvis
(floating and dipping)
Station- relationship of presenting part of fetus to the level of ischial
spines (0= level of ischial spine; -1 to -4= floating; +1 to +5= dipping)
Mechanisms (Cardinal Movements) of Labor
1. Descent: downward movement of biparietal diameter of fetal to
pelvic inlet
2. Flexion: head bends forward on chest
3. Internal rotation: brings shoulder to optimal position to enter the inlet
4. Extension: head extends and foremost part of the head, face and chin
5. External rotation: head rotate for final time
6. Expulsion: shoulders are born, easy
3. Powers of Labor
a. Uterine contractions
- Rhythmicity, progressive increase in length and intensity and accompany with
dilatation of cervix
b. Origins
- Begin at pacemaker
c. Phases
- 3 phases:
1. Increment (contraction intensity increases)
2. Acme (contraction at its strongest)
3. Decrement (Intensity decrease)
d. Contour changes
- From round, ovoid structure to elongated with vertical diameter
e. Cervical changes
1. Effacement: shortening and thinning of cervical canal
2. Dilatation: enlargement or widening of cervical canal from opening a few mm
wide to one large enough (approx. 10 cm) to permit passage of fetus
2. Second Stage
- Extending from time of full dilatation until infant is born
- Crowning presents
b. Physical Examination
Abdominal and lower leg assessment
Determining fetal position, presentation and lie
1. Determine the place on woman’s abdomen
2. Leopold Maneuvers: systematic method of observation and
palpation to determine fetal position and presentation
3. Vaginal Examination: to determine extent of cervical
softening, effacement and dilatation and to confirm fetal
presentation, position and degree of descent
4. Sonography: to determine diameters of fetal skull and
determine presentation, position, flexion and degree of
descent
e. Vital Signs
Temperature: report greater than 99 degree Fahrenheit (37.2 degree
Celsius)
Pulse and Respiration: pulse ( range between 70 to 80 beats/min);
respiration (18 to 20breaths/min)
Blood pressure: rise 5 to 15 mmHg during contractions
f. Laboratory Analysis
Blood
Urine
4. Electric Monitoring
- Set with automatic alarm that triggers FHR goes below 110 beats per min or
above about 170 beats/min
Initial electric monitoring: noninvase, easily applied and does not require
cervical dilation
c. Periodic Changes
- Fluctuation in FHR occur in response to contractions and fetal movement
- Described in term of acceleration or deceleration
d. Sinusoidal Pattern
I. The Care of a Woman During the Third and Fourth Stages of Labor
1. Delivery of placenta
2. Perineal inspection
3. Immediate postpartum assessment and nursing care