Vaginal Birth After Cesarean Delivery (VBAC)

 VAGINAL BIRTH AFTER CESAREAN DELIVERY (VBAC)

 

Cesarean deliveries may be performed as repeat procedures. Prior to the mid-1980s, it was believed that a previous cesarean delivery mandated that all subsequent deliveries be abdominal. Publication of data suggesting the safety of vaginal birth after cesarean (VBAC) led to a decade-long clinical trend away from the nearly 70-year-old adage: “Once a cesarean, always a cesarean.” Success rates of VBAC were found to be 60% to 80%. More recently, the pendulum has again swung, resulting in an increasing trend for patients and their physicians to opt for scheduled elec-tive repeat cesarean delivery.

 

The risks and benefits of a trial of labor versus repeat cesarean delivery should be discussed with the patient who has had a prior cesarean delivery. Although uterine rup-ture does occur more often with VBAC, the frequency is generally less than 1%.

 

The American College of Obstetricians and Gyne-cologists’ guidelines for trial of VBAC include the availabil-ity of a 24-hour blood bank, continuous electronic fetal heart rate monitoring, a physician capable of performing a cesarean delivery, in-house anesthesia services, and ability to meet a 30-minute “decision-to-incision” time frame if cesarean delivery becomes necessary. Box 8.1 summarizes clinical considerations for VBAC.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Postpartum Visit

Clinical Findings of Tubal Ectopic Pregnancy

Anxiety, Depression, and the Postpartum Period