Vaginal Exam for Preterm Labor
Friday, 12 April 2013
If you have symptoms of preterm labor, your doctor or nurse-midwife may examine you by feeling your cervix. If your contractions continue over a period of hours, you may be examined periodically to see whether your cervix is opening (dilating) or thinning (effacing).
These exams allow your health professional to:
Find out how much your cervix has opened and thinned.
Find out how far the baby has moved down the birth canal (station).
Check for fluid leaking from your vagina using a sterile speculum. If fluid is present, it will be tested to determine whether it is amniotic fluid, which is a sign that your amniotic sac has ruptured.
Why It Is Done
Vaginal exams are done when a pregnant woman has:
Uterine contractions that may have changed her cervix and may be preterm labor. The cervix may open and thin without strong or painful contractions.
Unusual pelvic pressure or back pain.
Vaginal bleeding.
Results
Preterm labor is diagnosed when a woman who is 20 to 37 weeks pregnant has uterine contractions and her cervix has changed, as seen with a vaginal exam.
Preterm labor is not diagnosed if contractions are occurring but the cervix is not becoming thinner or more dilated (open).
What To Think About
When a vaginal exam is not done to assess for preterm labor
When the amniotic membranes rupture early (preterm premature rupture of membranes, or pPROM), sterile speculum exams are kept to a minimum, and digital exams are avoided. This is meant to reduce the risk of infecting the uterus and fetus.
When the placenta is known to be overlapping or covering the cervix (placenta previa), vaginal exams are completely avoided. Disturbing the placenta can trigger bleeding.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Popular Posts
-
A CD4+ count is a blood test to determine how well the immune system is working in people who have been diagnosed with human immunodeficie...
-
A skull X-ray is a series of pictures of the bones of the skull. Skull X-rays have largely been replaced by computed tomography (CT) scans...
-
Varicoceles are enlarged varicose veins that occur in the scrotum. They are fairly common, affecting 15% of men overall and 40% of men wit...
-
An oral and maxillofacial surgeon or your dentist can remove (extract) a wisdom tooth. The procedure often can be done in the dentist'...
-
A wound or skin culture is a test to find and identify microbes (including bacteria, fungi or viruses, one a) that may be growing in the...
-
An extremity X-ray is a picture of your hand, wrist, arm, foot, ankle, knee, hip, or leg. It is done to see whether a bone has been fract...
-
An abdominal X-ray is a picture of structures and organs camera in the belly (abdomen). This includes the stomach, liver, spleen, large ...
-
Orchiectomy is the removal of one or both testicles (testes). The testicles are the male sex organs that produce sperm and the male hormon...
-
In Parkinson's disease, a part of the brain called the globus pallidus is overactive. This causes a decrease in the activity of a diff...
-
A magnetic resonance angiogram (MRA) is a type of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan that uses a magnetic field and pulses of radio wav...

0 comments:
Post a Comment