Baseline & variability
Decelerations
Uterine activity
Category classification
Interventions
100

This is the normal fetal heart rate baseline range.

What is 110-160 bpm?


100

This physiologic mechanism is responsible for early decelerations, and is not associated with fetal acidemia.

What is fetal head compression causing a vagal reflex?

  • ACOG: Early decels = benign; no correlation with acidemia.

  • NICHD definitions (1997 & 2008): via increased intracranial pressure → vagal stimulation → drop in HR.

100

This precise definition of tachysystole must be used regardless of fetal heart tracing category

What is >5 contractions in 10 minutes averaged over 30 minutes?

100

A tracing with baseline 110–160, moderate variability, and no late/variable decelerations is classified as this.

What is category I.

• Early decelerations: present or absent

• Accelerations: present or absent

100

This simple bedside maneuver is usually the first step in treating many nonreassuring FHR patterns.

What is maternal repositioning?

200

A fetal baseline above 160 bpm is called this, and can be caused by maternal fever, infection, or dehydration.

What is fetal tachycardia?

200

This finding differentiates a prolonged deceleration from a baseline change.

What is duration >2 minutes but <10 minutes?

  • NICHD: 2–10 minutes = prolonged deceleration; ≥10 minutes = baseline shift (bradycardia).

200

This quantitative measure, expressed in Montevideo units (MVUs), defines adequate labor per IUPC.

What is ≥200 MVUs over 10 minutes?

  • Friedman curve; confirmed by later labor progress studies.

  • SMFM: adequate power = ≥200 MVUs for active labor.

200

Absent variability plus recurrent late decelerations is this Category.

What is Category III?

• Absent baseline FHR variability and any of the following:

   • Recurrent late decels

   • Recurrent variable decels

   • Bradycardia

• Sinusoidal pattern

200

This intervention reduces recurrent variable decelerations by relieving cord compression after ROM.

What is amnioinfusion?
300

This is the minimum number of minutes of identifiable baseline needed within a 10-minute window to define baseline fetal heart rate.

What is at least two minutes?

300

This deceleration pattern, often seen after epidural placement, is related to maternal hemodynamic changes rather than fetal pathology.

What is a prolonged deceleration caused by maternal hypotension?

  • Up to 10–15% incidence after epidural.

  • Supported by anesthesia literature and ACOG guidelines.

  • Improves with maternal repositioning and fluids.

300

This intervention is first-line for recurrent variable decelerations associated with tachysystole even before considering amnioinfusion.

What is reducing or stopping oxytocin?

  • Oxytocin is most common iatrogenic cause of tachysystole.

300

A Category II tracing with minimal variability but no recurrent decelerations should be managed initially with these supportive steps

What are intrauterine resuscitation measures (repositioning, fluids, stop oxytocin)?

300

Name at least three “intrauterine resuscitation” steps should be taken for Category II tracings.

What are repositioning, IV fluids, reducing/ stopping oxytocin, oxygen (strong evidence against oxygen in the absence of maternal hypoxia ), and treating tachysystole?

400

This physiologic mechanism is the primary driver of fetal heart rate variability.

What is the interplay between sympathetic and parasympathetic (vagal) nervous systems?

Variability reflects neurologic integrity, fetal oxygenation, and autonomic balance. 

See ACOG Practice Bulletin 106

400

This key distinction between variable and late decelerations explains why variables improve with amnioinfusion, but lates do not.

What is the underlying cause (cord compression vs uteroplacental insufficiency)?

  • Multiple RCTs: amnioinfusion reduces variable decels but no effect on lates.

400

This physiologic mechanism explains why tachysystole increases the risk for fetal acidemia.

What is reduced intervillous blood flow during shortened relaxation time?

  • Uterine contraction → transient ↓ uteroplacental perfusion.

  • Without rest periods → cumulative fetal hypoxemia.

  • ACOG: tachysystole = risk for fetal compromise.

400

Name  two situations in which Category III tracings warrant immediate consideration of delivery.

What are persistent bradycardia OR absent variability with recurrent decels despite resuscitation?

400

When Category III patterns persist despite resuscitation, the next step is this.

What is expedited delivery (operative vaginal or C-section)?

500

Meta-analyses show this FHR characteristic has the highest negative predictive value for acidemia ( > 95%). 

What is moderate variability?

Moderate variability is the best indicator of normal acid-base status. On FHT, moderate variability is 6-25 bpm fluctuation in fetal heart rate from beat to beat, and excludes decelerations and accelerations. 

Absent: amplitude range undetectable

Minimal: amplitude range ≤ 5 bpm

Marked: > 25 bpm

 

500

This advanced physiologic explanation describes why late decelerations occur during uteroplacental insufficiency.

What is chemoreceptor-mediated reflex bradycardia triggered by transient fetal hypoxia during uterine contraction peaks?

  • Uterine contraction → ↓ uteroplacental perfusion → ↓ fetal pO₂ → carotid chemoreceptors → vagal response

  • Fetus will also peripherally vasoconstrict in response to low oxygen and will prioritize blood flow to vital organs

500

This drug is commonly used for acute tocolysis in tachysystole, given as 0.25 mg SQ.

What is terbutaline?

• Beta-agonists reduce uterine contractions and improve fetoplacental oxygen delivery

500

Visually apparent, smooth, sine wave-like undulating pattern in FHR baseline with a cycle frequency of 3-5 per minute which persists for 20 minutes or more

What is a sinusoidal pattern


•Cat III

500

This intervention is recommended by ACOG when a Category II tracing includes recurrent late decelerations without tachysystole, and is supported by data showing reduction in late decel frequency and improved fetal pH.

What is a maternal IV fluid bolus (up to 1 L isotonic crystalloid)?

• Increased maternal intravascular volume improves uteroplacental perfusion; studies show transient improvement in FHR and umbilical arterial pH.

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