Shoulder dystocia

Shoulder dystocia is when, after vaginal delivery of the head, the baby's anterior shoulder gets caught above the mother's pubic bone. Signs include retraction of the baby's head back into the vagina, known as "turtle sign". Complications for the baby may include brachial plexus injury, or clavicle fracture. Complications for the mother may include vaginal or perineal tears, postpartum bleeding, or uterine rupture.

Risk factors include gestational diabetes, previous history of the condition, operative vaginal delivery, obesity in the mother, an overly large baby, and epidural anesthesia. It is diagnosed when the body fails to deliver within three minutes of delivery of the baby's head. It is a type of obstructed labour.

Shoulder dystocia is an obstetric emergency. Initial efforts to release a shoulder typically include: with a woman on her back pushing the legs outward and upward, pushing on the abdomen above the pubic bone. If these are not effective, efforts to manually rotate the baby's shoulders or placing the woman on all fours may be tried. Shoulder dystocia occurs in approximately 0.4% to 1.4% of vaginal births. Death as a result of shoulder dystocia is very uncommon.

Signs and symptoms
One characteristic of a minority of shoulder dystocia deliveries is the turtle sign, which involves the retraction of the fetal chin against the mother's perineum after the head is delivered. This occurs when the baby's shoulder is obstructed by the maternal pelvis or high in the pelvis.

Complications
Possible complications include: One complication of shoulder dystocia is damage to the upper brachial plexus nerves. These supply the sensory and motor components of the shoulder, arm, and hands. The ventral roots (motor pathway) are most prone to injury. The cause of injury to the baby is debated, but a probable mechanism is manual stretching of the nerves, which in itself can cause injury. Excess tension may physically tear the nerve roots out from the neonatal spinal column, resulting in total dysfunction.
 * Neonatal complications:
 * Brachial plexus injuries (2.3% to 16%) leading in some cases to:
 * Klumpke paralysis
 * Erb's palsy
 * Hypoxia, leading in some cases to:
 * Cerebral palsy
 * Bone fractures
 * Death
 * Maternal complications:
 * Postpartum bleeding (11%)
 * Perineal lacerations that extend into the anal sphincter
 * Pubic symphysis separation
 * Neuropathy of lateral femoral cutaneous nerve
 * Uterine rupture

Risk factors
About 16% of deliveries where shoulder dystocia occurs have conventional risk factors. These include diabetes, fetal macrosomia, and maternal obesity.

Risk factors:
 * Age >35
 * Short in stature
 * Small or abnormal pelvis
 * More than 42 weeks gestation
 * High estimated fetal weight
 * Maternal diabetes (2–4 fold increase in risk)

Factors which increase the risk/are warning signs:
 * Need for oxytocics
 * Prolonged first or second stage of labour
 * Turtle sign (head bobbing in the second stage)
 * Failure to restitute
 * No shoulder rotation or descent
 * Instrumental delivery

For women with a previous shoulder dystocia, the risk of recurrence is at least 10%.

Management
The steps to treating a shoulder dystocia are outlined by the mnemonic ALARMER:
 * Ask for help. This involves asking for the help of an obstetrician, anesthesia, and for pediatrics for subsequent resuscitation of the infant that may be needed if the methods below fail;
 * Leg hyperflexion and abduction at the hips (McRoberts maneuver);
 * Anterior shoulder disimpaction (suprapubic pressure);
 * Rotation of the shoulder (Rubin maneuver);
 * Manual delivery of posterior arm;
 * Episiotomy;
 * Roll over on all fours.

Typically the procedures are performed in the order listed and the sequence ends whenever a technique is successful. Intentional fracturing of the clavicle, a procedure known as cleidotomy, is another possibility at non-operative vaginal delivery prior to Zavanelli's maneuver, or symphysiotomy, both of which are considered extraordinary treatment measures. Pushing on the fundus is not recommended.

Simulation training of health care providers to prevent delays in delivery when a shoulder dystocia presents is useful.

Procedures
A number of labor positions and maneuvers are sequentially performed in attempt to facilitate delivery. These include:
 * McRoberts maneuver; involves hyperflexing the mother's legs tightly to her abdomen. This widens the pelvis, and flattens the spine in the lower back (lumbar spine). If this maneuver does not succeed, an assistant applies pressure on the lower abdomen (suprapubic pressure), and the delivered head is also gently pulled. The technique is effective in about 42% of cases;
 * Suprapubic pressure (or Rubin I);
 * Rubin II or posterior pressure on the anterior shoulder, which would bring the baby into an oblique position with the head somewhat towards the vagina;


 * Wood's screw maneuver which leads to turning the anterior shoulder to the posterior and vice versa (somewhat the opposite of Rubin II maneuver);
 * Jacquemier's maneuver (also called Barnum's maneuver), or delivery of the posterior shoulder first, in which the forearm and hand are identified in the birth canal, and gently pulled;
 * Gaskin maneuver involves moving the mother to an all fours position with the back arched, widening the pelvic outlet.

More drastic maneuvers include:
 * Zavanelli's maneuver, which involves pushing the baby's head back in (internal cephalic replacement) followed by a cesarean section;
 * Cleidotomy, which is causing intentional causing clavicular fractures, thus reducing the diameter of the shoulders to pass through the birth canal;
 * Maternal symphysiotomy, which makes the opening of the birth canal laxer by breaking the connective tissue between the two pubes bones;
 * Abdominal rescue, described by O'Shaughnessy, where a hysterotomy facilitates vaginal delivery of the impacted shoulder.

Epidemiology
Shoulder dystocia occurs in about 0.15% to 4% of term vaginal births.