uterine activity
monitoring
baseline and variability
accels and decels
intervention
100

The number of contractions in 10 minutes that signals uterine tachysystole.

more than 5 contractions in 10 minutes

100

Low-risk patients can be monitored intermittently with this technique instead of EFM.

intermittent auscultation (IA)

100

Normal baseline FHR range.

110–160 bpm

100

An acceleration at ≥32 weeks is defined as a rise of this many beats above baseline for this long.

15 bpm for at least 15 seconds

100

First action when late decelerations appear

reposition mother (left side)

200

The measurement that adds contraction peak pressures in a 10-minute strip; goal is above 200.

MVU

200

A device that screws into the fetal scalp for accurate FHR monitoring.

spiral electrode

200

Variability of 6–25 bpm, predictive of good outcomes.

moderate variability

200

These decelerations mirror contractions and are considered benign.

early decelerations

200

FHR >160 bpm for 10 minutes is tachycardia, most often caused by this maternal factor.

maternal fever/infection

300

Normal contraction duration during first and second stages of labor.

45–80 seconds

300

A portable system that allows ambulation but does not measure contraction intensity.

telemetry monitoring

300

Absent or minimal variability may be due to this maternal factor.

CNS depressant medications or fetal sleep cycle

300

These decelerations occur after contractions and indicate uteroplacental insufficiency.

late decelerations

300

FHR <110 bpm for 10 minutes is bradycardia, which may indicate this late sign.

fetal hypoxia

400

Typical intensity range in mmHg during first stage of labor, and in the second stage.

5–50 mmHg in first stage, rising to >80 mmHg in second stage

400

Name two disadvantages of external ultrasound transducer monitoring.

frequent readjustments due to fetal/maternal movement and difficulty with OP position or anterior placenta

400

Variability >25 bpm; significance uncertain—notify physician.

marked variability

400

Abrupt decreases in FHR caused by cord compression, sometimes treated with amnioinfusion.

variable decelerations

400

Category I tracing is considered normal. Name its three hallmark features.

baseline 110–160, moderate variability, no late/variable decels

500

The uterine resting tone measured with IUPC.

~10 mmHg

500

To place an intrauterine pressure catheter (IUPC), these two conditions must be present.

cervical dilation of 2–3 cm and ruptured membranes (ROM)

500

A smooth wave-like FHR pattern often associated with severe fetal anemia or impending demise.  

sinusoidal pattern

500

Decelerations lasting 2–10 minutes, caused by sustained hypoxia or head compression.

prolonged decelerations

500

Two interventions for uterine tachysystole (>6 contractions in 10 min).

stop Pitocin, reposition mother, give O₂, increase IV fluids, or administer terbutaline

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