Mangesi L, Hofmeyr G J
Frere Maternity Hospital, Effective Care Research Group, Private Bag X9047, East London, South Africa, 5200.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2007 Jan 24(1):CD004909. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD004909.pub2.
Fetal movement counting is a method by which a woman quantifies the movements she feels to assess the condition of the baby. The purpose is to try to reduce perinatal mortality by alerting caregivers when the baby might have become compromised. This method may be used routinely, or only in women who are considered at increased risk of complications in the baby. Some clinicians believe that fetal movement counting is a good method as it allows the clinician to make appropriate interventions in good time. On the other hand, fetal movement counting may cause anxiety to women.
To assess outcomes of pregnancy where fetal movement counting was done routinely, selectively or was not done at all; and to compare different methods of fetal movement counting.
We searched the Cochrane Pregnancy and Childbirth Group's Trials Register (30 September 2006), the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (The Cochrane Library) and the reference lists of relevant papers.
Randomised controlled trials. Trials were excluded where allocation concealment was inadequate and no measures were taken to prevent bias were excluded. The interventions included routine fetal movement counting, selective fetal movement counting, and studies comparing different fetal assessment methods.
We assessed the methodological quality of included studies and extracted data from studies.
Four studies, involving 71,370 women, were included in this review; 68,654 in one cluster-randomised trial. All four trials compared formal fetal movement counting. Two trials compared different types of counting with each other; one with no formal instruction, and one with hormonal analysis. Women in the formal fetal movement counting group had significantly fewer visits to the hospital antenatally than those women randomised to hormone analysis (relative risk (RR) 0.26, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.20 to 0.35), whereas there were fewer Apgar scores less than seven in five minutes for women randomised to hormone analysis (RR 1.72, 95% CI 1.01 to 2.93). There was a significantly higher compliance with the Cardiff 'count to ten' method than with the formal fetal movement counting method (RR 0.25, 95% CI 0.19 to 0.32).All other outcomes reported were non significant.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: This review does not provide enough evidence to influence practice. In particular, no trials compared fetal movement counting with no fetal movement counting. Robust research is needed in this area.
胎动计数是一种让孕妇对自身感觉到的胎动进行量化,以评估胎儿状况的方法。其目的是在胎儿可能出现问题时向医护人员发出警报,从而试图降低围产期死亡率。这种方法既可以常规使用,也可以仅用于那些被认为胎儿出现并发症风险增加的孕妇。一些临床医生认为胎动计数是一种好方法,因为它能让临床医生及时进行适当干预。另一方面,胎动计数可能会使孕妇焦虑。
评估常规进行胎动计数、选择性进行胎动计数或根本不进行胎动计数的妊娠结局;并比较不同的胎动计数方法。
我们检索了Cochrane妊娠与分娩组试验注册库(2006年9月30日)、Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(Cochrane图书馆)以及相关论文的参考文献列表。
随机对照试验。分配隐藏不充分且未采取措施防止偏倚的试验被排除。干预措施包括常规胎动计数、选择性胎动计数以及比较不同胎儿评估方法的研究。
我们评估了纳入研究的方法学质量,并从研究中提取数据。
本综述纳入了4项研究,涉及71370名女性;其中一项整群随机试验涉及68654名女性。所有4项试验均比较了正式的胎动计数。两项试验相互比较了不同类型的计数;一项没有正式指导,另一项进行了激素分析。正式胎动计数组的女性产前到医院就诊的次数明显少于随机分配到激素分析组的女性(相对危险度(RR)0.26,95%置信区间(CI)0.20至0.35),而随机分配到激素分析组的女性5分钟时阿氏评分低于7分的情况较少(RR 1.72,95%CI 1.01至2.93)。与正式胎动计数方法相比,卡迪夫“数到十”方法的依从性明显更高(RR 0.25,95%CI 0.19至0.32)。报告的所有其他结局均无统计学意义。
本综述没有提供足够的证据来影响实践。特别是,没有试验比较胎动计数与不进行胎动计数的情况。该领域需要进行有力的研究。