Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Canadian Institutes of Health Research Group in Fetal and Neonatal Health and Development, St. Joseph's Health Care, University of Western Ontario, London, Canada. brichar2@uwo.ca
The purpose of this study was to determine risk assessments for a spectrum of neonatal outcomes with elective cesarean delivery versus a trial of labor for previous cesarean section and otherwise healthy patients who deliver at term.
The perinatal/neonatal database of St. Joseph's Health Care, London, Ontario, Canada, was used to obtain the umbilical cord pH and base excess values, incidence of adverse neonatal outcomes, and patient demographics for all term (> or =37 weeks of gestation), singleton, liveborn, or intrapartum demise infants with no major anomalies who were delivered between January 1992 and March 2002 (n = 33,709 infants). Patient groupings (all patient, patient with previous cesarean delivery, and low-risk patient) with no labor versus labor were studied by a comparison of mean values/incidences for those neonatal outcomes that were available from the database with the use of linear and logistic regression analysis and controlling for potentially confounding variables.
Labor was associated with a small drop in umbilical artery pH from approximately 7.27 to 7.25 and base excess from approximately -3.1 to -5.4 mmol/L, but this was generally well tolerated, with no difference in the incidence of 5-minute Apgar scores of