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Introduction: Fetal scalp electrode (FSE) is considered the gold standard for the intrapartum monitoring of the fetal heart rate (FHR) being associated with the lowest rate of signal loss and artifacts including the recording of the maternal heart rate. FSE acquires a fetal electrocardiogram and evaluates the time intervals between successive R waves. As such, it allows the recording of the beat-to-beat fluctuation of the FHR. However, due to the precise estimation of the inter-beat interval, FSE may also demonstrate recurrent atrial ectopic beats and register a highly oscillatory FHR pattern mimicking a saltatory or ZigZag appearance.
Case Presentation: We herein describe a case of intrapartum supraventricular ectopic beats leading to the recording of a saltatory appearance of the FHR that could be demonstrated using FSE only and precluded a reliable assessment of intrapartum fetal oxygenation. Transabdominal gray-scale and M-mode ultrasound assessment of the fetal heart documented supraventricular ectopic beats recurring in 1 out of 10-12 beats, thus supporting the hypothesis that the abnormal FHR pattern on the CTG trace was secondary to fetal arrhythmia and not to rapidly evolving fetal hypoxia.
Conclusion: In supraventricular fetal arrhythmia, the use of FSE for continuous intrapartum FHR monitoring differently from external ultrasound transducer may capture a highly variable CTG pattern which is caused by the registration of the ectopic atrial beats and not by a rapidly evolving hypoxia.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000542935 | DOI Listing |
Int J Obstet Anesth
September 2025
Westmead Hospital Department of Anaesthesia and Perioperative Medicine, Westmead, Australia.
Background: Maternal cardiovascular disease (CVD) is a leading cause of maternal mortality. Data on anaesthetic management in patients with CVD is limited.
Methods: This ten-year retrospective cohort study of 508 pregnancies in women with CVD, stratified by modified World Health Organization (mWHO) risk category, compared lowrisk (mWHO I-II) (n = 323) and high-risk (mWHO II to III-IV) (n = 185) groups to a control obstetric population (n = 55,153).
Gait Posture
September 2025
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, 330 Brookline Avenue, RN115, Boston, MA 02215, USA.
Nat Rev Cardiol
September 2025
Murdoch Children's Research Institute, The Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
A central paradigm in cardiac biology is the reactivation of the fetal gene programme in the adult heart in response to stress. This so-called 'fetal gene hypothesis' was first proposed almost 40 years ago following the observation that certain fetal contractile protein isoforms were re-expressed in hypertrophied ventricles in the rodent heart in response to haemodynamic overload. Consequently, this concept was broadly adopted, and activation of the fetal gene programme became synonymous in the literature with the cardiac stress response.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol
September 2025
Department of Pediatrics, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri.
Excess testosterone (T) exposure from early to mid-gestation (days 30-90) leads to sexually dimorphic adverse cardiac left ventricular (LV) programming at fetal day 90 (term 147 days). Whether this sexually dimorphic impact is a direct effect of T or reprogramming that persists beyond early fetal life is unknown. We hypothesized that adverse sex-specific cardiac outcomes seen in early fetal life will persist in late gestational fetuses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Open Sport Exerc Med
September 2025
Department of Sports Medicine, Norwegian School of Sports Sciences, Oslo, Norway.
Objectives: To explore the acute effects of a heavy-load resistance protocol and exercise in the supine position on fetal heart rate (FHR) and uteroplacental blood flow.
Method: In this experimental laboratory study, 48 healthy pregnant athletes (elite: n=7; recreational: n=41) completed 3×8 repetitions with one repetition in reserve in sumo deadlift, bench press and incline bench press. FHR and umbilical and uterine artery pulsatility index (PI) were assessed before and after exercise.