What is shoulder dystocia?
Dystocia is the term used for difficult labor or delivery of
a baby. Shoulder dystocia occurs when the baby's head is
delivered, but the shoulders cannot be delivered because
they are too wide and stuck behind the mother's pubic bone
or the opening to the birth canal.
How does it occur?
Shoulder dystocia may occur when:
- A baby is unusually large. Women who are overweight or
have diabetes are more likely to have large babies.
- The opening of the mother's pelvis is too small for the
baby's shoulders to come out.
How is it diagnosed?
Shoulder dystocia is usually unpredictable and is first
noticed during delivery. If your health care provider
suspects that you are at risk for shoulder dystocia, you may
have an ultrasound scan before you go into labor. The
ultrasound scan will help your provider know how big the
baby is and whether the baby's size might be a problem
during delivery.
What is the treatment?
You will need help from your health care provider to deliver
the baby safely.
If it is clear before you go into labor that the baby is too
big or your pelvis is too small to deliver the baby, a
cesarean section can be planned. A cesarean section, or
C-section, is a surgical procedure for delivering babies.
During labor your provider may decide that a C-section is
necessary if:
- It takes you a long time to dilate completely.
- The pushing phase of labor takes a long time.
- The baby's head doesn't move down the birth canal when
you push.
Your provider may do one or more of the following procedures
to allow the baby to be delivered safely without a
C-section:
- Cut a large episiotomy to widen the opening of your
vagina.
- Move the baby's shoulder by pressing downward on the
baby's head.
- Raise your legs up and push them back against your
stomach to widen your pelvic opening.
- Put pressure on the baby's shoulder above your pubic
bone.
- Try to turn the baby's shoulder.
- Reach into your vagina, put pressure on the baby's arm,
and deliver the arm and then the shoulder and rest of the
baby.
- Break the baby's clavicle (collarbone) to make the
shoulders narrower so they fit through the opening.
How long will the effects last?
Usually there is not any permanent damage. However, the
longer the problem lasts during delivery, the greater the
risk of complications for you and the baby.
Possible complications for the mother include:
- rupture (tearing) of the uterus
- hemorrhage (heavy bleeding) after the delivery
- bruising or tearing of the cervix or vagina
- tearing of the rectum
- bruising or irritation of the bladder.
Possible complications for the baby are:
- injury to the nerves in the arm and hand, possibly
causing the arm to be paralyzed (the paralysis may go
away or it may be permanent)
- breaking of the arm or collarbone
- lack of oxygen, which can cause problems with the nervous
system, brain damage, or death.
What can be done to help prevent shoulder dystocia?
If you are at risk for shoulder dystocia (especially if you
have diabetes), it is important to try to estimate the size
of your baby with an ultrasound scan before labor. If
shoulder dystocia seems likely, a C-section can be planned
to avoid the problem.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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