Lear Christopher A, Galinsky Robert, Wassink Guido, Yamaguchi Kyohei, Davidson Joanne O, Westgate Jenny A, Bennet Laura, Gunn Alistair J
The Fetal Physiology and Neuroscience Group, Department of Physiology, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Mie University Graduate School of Medicine, Mie, Japan.
J Physiol. 2016 Sep 1;594(17):4711-25. doi: 10.1113/JP271205. Epub 2016 May 27.
A distinctive pattern of recurrent rapid falls in fetal heart rate, called decelerations, are commonly associated with uterine contractions during labour. These brief decelerations are mediated by vagal activation. The reflex triggering this vagal response has been variably attributed to a mechanoreceptor response to fetal head compression, to baroreflex activation following increased blood pressure during umbilical cord compression, and/or a Bezold-Jarisch reflex response to reduced venous return from the placenta. Although these complex explanations are still widespread today, there is no consistent evidence that they are common during labour. Instead, the only mechanism that has been systematically investigated, proven to be reliably active during labour and, crucially, capable of producing rapid decelerations is the peripheral chemoreflex. The peripheral chemoreflex is triggered by transient periods of asphyxia that are a normal phenomenon associated with all uterine contractions. This should not cause concern as the healthy fetus has a remarkable ability to adapt to these repeated but short periods of asphyxia. This means that the healthy fetus is typically not at risk of hypotension and injury during uncomplicated labour even during repeated brief decelerations. The physiologically incorrect theories surrounding decelerations that ignore the natural occurrence of repeated asphyxia probably gained widespread support to help explain why many babies are born healthy despite repeated decelerations during labour. We propose that a unified and physiological understanding of intrapartum decelerations that accepts the true nature of labour is critical to improve interpretation of intrapartum fetal heart rate patterns.
一种称为减速的胎儿心率反复快速下降的独特模式,通常与分娩期间的子宫收缩有关。这些短暂的减速是由迷走神经激活介导的。引发这种迷走神经反应的反射,其原因一直存在多种说法,有人认为是对胎儿头部受压的机械感受器反应,有人认为是脐带受压期间血压升高后引发的压力反射激活,和/或对胎盘静脉回流减少的贝佐尔德 - 雅里什反射反应。尽管这些复杂的解释如今仍然广泛存在,但并没有一致的证据表明它们在分娩期间很常见。相反,唯一经过系统研究、被证明在分娩期间可靠地发挥作用且至关重要的是能够产生快速减速的机制是外周化学反射。外周化学反射是由短暂的窒息期触发的,而窒息是与所有子宫收缩相关的正常现象。这无需担忧,因为健康的胎儿具有显著的能力来适应这些反复但短暂的窒息期。这意味着即使在反复短暂减速期间,健康的胎儿在无并发症的分娩过程中通常也不会有低血压和受伤的风险。围绕减速的生理学上不正确的理论,忽略了反复窒息的自然发生,可能获得了广泛支持,以帮助解释为什么许多婴儿尽管在分娩期间出现反复减速,但仍能健康出生。我们认为,对产时减速形成一种统一且符合生理学的理解,承认分娩的真实本质,对于改进产时胎儿心率模式的解读至关重要。