Fetal Monitoring and Assessment During Labor
Intrapartum fetal assessment uses the fetal heart rate, alone or in relation to uterine contractions, as an indirect signal of fetal oxygenation during labor. Methods range from intermittent auscultation to continuous electronic fetal monitoring (cardiotocography), interpreted through a standardized vocabulary of baseline rate, variability, accelerations, and decelerations.
Definition
Intrapartum fetal monitoring is the assessment of fetal wellbeing during labor, most commonly by observing the fetal heart rate pattern in relation to uterine contractions as an indirect indicator of fetal oxygen status.
Scope
This topic covers the rationale for monitoring the fetus during labor, the principal methods (intermittent auscultation and continuous cardiotocography), the standardized NICHD definitions and three-tier interpretation framework, and the evidence on how monitoring relates to outcomes. It is a reference and educational entry and does not prescribe monitoring choices for any individual.
Core questions
- Why is the fetal heart rate used to infer fetal wellbeing during labor?
- How do intermittent auscultation and continuous cardiotocography differ?
- What do baseline rate, variability, accelerations, and decelerations signify?
- How does continuous monitoring affect neonatal and maternal outcomes?
Key concepts
- Fetal heart rate baseline
- Baseline variability
- Accelerations and decelerations
- Cardiotocography (CTG)
- Intermittent auscultation
- NICHD three-tier interpretation system
- Uterine activity
Mechanisms
Fetal oxygenation during labor is challenged transiently by uterine contractions that reduce placental perfusion. The fetal heart rate responds to changing oxygen and acid-base status through autonomic reflexes, so its pattern serves as an indirect window on fetal wellbeing. The NICHD framework standardizes the description of baseline rate, variability, accelerations, and deceleration types and groups tracings into three categories reflecting the likelihood of normal acid-base status; the framework defines terminology rather than guaranteeing outcomes.
Clinical relevance
Standardized interpretation aims to support consistent communication about fetal status during labor. Evidence indicates that continuous cardiotocography, compared with intermittent auscultation, is associated with changes in some intervention rates without clearly improving the most serious neonatal outcomes, illustrating the limits of the technology. This entry describes these relationships for orientation and is not clinical guidance.
Epidemiology
Continuous electronic fetal monitoring is widely used during labor in many high-resource settings despite evidence questioning its benefit for low-risk labors, a pattern that has driven debate about appropriate use.
Evidence & guidelines
The 2008 NICHD workshop report provides the standardized definitions and three-tier interpretation system widely adopted in practice. Cochrane evidence on continuous cardiotocography summarizes its effects on neonatal and maternal outcomes, including an association with increased operative intervention.
History
Electronic fetal monitoring was introduced into obstetric practice in the 1960s and 1970s with the expectation of reducing perinatal injury. Inconsistent terminology prompted standardization efforts, culminating in the 2008 NICHD workshop definitions, while accumulating trial evidence reshaped expectations about its benefits.
Debates
- Does continuous electronic fetal monitoring improve outcomes for low-risk labor?
- Compared with intermittent auscultation, continuous cardiotocography is associated with more cesarean and instrumental deliveries without a clear reduction in serious adverse neonatal outcomes, so its routine use in low-risk labor remains contested.
Key figures
- George Macones
- Zarko Alfirevic
Related topics
Seminal works
- macones-2008
- alfirevic-2017
Frequently asked questions
- What is cardiotocography?
- Cardiotocography (CTG) is continuous electronic recording of the fetal heart rate alongside uterine contractions, used to assess fetal wellbeing during labor.
- Is continuous monitoring always better than listening intermittently?
- Not necessarily; for low-risk labor, continuous monitoring is associated with more interventions without clearly improving the most serious neonatal outcomes compared with intermittent auscultation.