Internal Fetal Monitoring
What is internal fetal monitoring?
Fetal monitoring measures the baby's heart rate and the
mother's contractions during labor. A fetal monitor may be
external or internal. For external monitoring, instruments
are held in place on the mother's abdomen by two belts.
Internal fetal monitoring uses an instrument that goes into
the mother's uterus and an instrument that is connected
directly to the baby's scalp. The instruments produce
graphs that can be viewed on a screen. This information
helps your healthcare provider know how the baby is doing
during labor. It also shows how strong and frequent your
contractions are.
Although internal and external monitors record the same
information, internal monitoring is more accurate.
When is it used?
Your healthcare provider will use internal monitoring if:
- The results of external monitoring are inaccurate,
abnormal, or inconclusive.
- Your provider wants to watch the baby's condition more
closely.
Your healthcare provider may also use internal fetal
monitoring if:
- The external monitor is not recording accurately.
- You have a high-risk pregnancy.
- The baby has an abnormal fetal heart rate.
- The mother has an illness, such as diabetes or high blood
pressure.
- Your provider wants to measure the strength of your
contractions.
- You are given the drug oxytocin, which helps stimulate
contractions.
When is it not used?
The membrane and fluid surrounding the baby (often called the
bag of water) must be broken to insert an internal monitor.
For this reason there are times when your healthcare
provider will not use the test. You will not have internal
monitoring if:
- Your placenta is covering the opening to the uterus (a
condition called placenta previa).
- The baby is too high in the uterus and breaking the bag
of waters could be dangerous.
- You have a herpes or strep infection. Using an internal
monitor could increase the chance of spreading the
infection to the baby.
- The baby or the labor is premature. Your healthcare
provider would not break the bag of water in this case
because it would make you go into labor.
What happens during the procedure?
A fetal scalp electrode and an intrauterine pressure
catheter are used. The electrode is a small wire. It is
placed directly on the baby's scalp and records the baby's
heart rate. The catheter is a narrow tube inserted into the
uterus. A pressure gauge attached to the catheter measures
the strength and frequency of your contractions.
What happens if the fetal heart rate is not normal?
Your doctor may:
- Give you oxygen to breath
- Change the position in which you are lying
- Start intravenous fluids (fluids given in your vein, or
an IV)
- Give medicine to stop or slow down the number of
contractions or lessen the strength of the contractions
- Deliver the baby immediately by forceps or vacuum
extraction if possible
- Deliver the baby by C-section.
What are the risks associated with this procedure?
Complications from this test are rare. They may include the
following:
- The spiral electrode may cause an infection on the baby's
scalp.
- Improper placement of the electrode may hurt the baby.
- The catheter placed in the uterus may cause bleeding in
the mother if it goes through the placenta or the uterine
wall. Also, it may cause the uterus to become infected.
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change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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