FHR Basics
Uterine Activity
FHR Variability
Accelerations & Decelerations
Interpretation & Interventions
100

What is the normal baseline fetal heart rate range?

110–160 bpm

100

Which device externally measures uterine contractions?

Tocotransducer

100

What does variability in FHR reflect?

Intact and oxygenated autonomic nervous system

100

What are accelerations and why are they important?

Abrupt, transient FHR increases; most reassuring sign of fetal well-being

100

What FHR category is reassuring?

Category I (normal baseline, moderate variability, accelerations present/absent, no late/variable decels)

200

Define tachycardia in the fetus.

Baseline FHR >160 bpm lasting at least 10 minutes

200

What is the only method that can quantify contraction pressure in mmHg?


Intrauterine Pressure Catheter (IUPC)

200

Amplitude range undetectable = what type of variability?

Absent variability

200

Criteria for accelerations at ≥32 weeks?

≥15 bpm above baseline for ≥15 seconds

200

What FHR category requires intrauterine resuscitation and expedited birth?

Category III

300

Define bradycardia in the fetus.

Baseline FHR <110 bpm lasting more than 10 minutes

300

Normal contraction peak intensity measured internally is approximately?

70–90 mmHg

300

Amplitude <5 bpm = what variability level?

Minimal variability

300

What causes early decelerations and are they concerning?

Fetal head compression; benign, no intervention needed

300

Give two intrauterine resuscitation measures for non-reassuring patterns.

Reposition mother, administer oxygen, IV fluids, stop oxytocin, notify provider

400

Name one advantage and one disadvantage of internal fetal monitoring (FSE/ISE).

Advantage: Most accurate, no artifact. Disadvantage: Requires ROM, cannot place on face/fontanel/genitals

400

Describe how mild, moderate, and strong contractions feel on palpation.

Mild = tip of nose, Moderate = chin, Strong = forehead

400

Amplitude 6–25 bpm = what variability level?

Moderate variability

400

What is the usual cause of variable decelerations?

Umbilical cord compression

400

Describe a prolonged deceleration.

FHR decrease >15 bpm lasting 2–10 minutes

500

What are the goals of FHR monitoring?

Assess fetal well-being, maternal well-being, labor progress, and effects of interventions

500

Define contraction frequency and duration.

Frequency = start of one contraction to start of next (minutes); 

Duration = beginning to end of one contraction (seconds)

500

Amplitude >25 bpm = what variability level?

Marked variability

500

What causes late decelerations and why are they concerning?

Uteroplacental insufficiency → indicates oxygenation problem

500

What pattern is very abnormal, associated with severe hypoxia/anemia, and appears wave-like?

Sinusoidal pattern