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Fetal Presentation and Malpresentation

Definition

Fetal presentation:

  • Refers to the part of the fetus that occupies the lower uterine segment and overlies the pelvic inlet
  • In other words, the part that will enter the maternal pelvis first during labour

Fetal presentation is partly determined by the fetal lie:

  • Fetal lie: the relationship between the long axis of the fetus (spine) and the long axis of the uterus (mother’s spine)
  • Possible fetal lies: longitudinal, transverse or oblique

Normal Fetal Presentation

Normal fetal presentation (in ~96% of term pregnancies): cephalic presentation (fetal head is the presenting part)

However, there are several subtypes of cephalic presentation depending on the degree of head flexion:

  • Vertex (the true normal presentation): head is fully flexed (→ occiput presents)
  • Brow: head is partially extended (→ frotnum presents)
  • Face: head is fully extended (→ mentum presents)

Malpresentation ≠ non-cephalic. As brow/face presentations sit within cephalic but are still abnormal.

Malpresentation covers:

  • Non-cephalic presentations (e.g. breech, shoulder), AND
  • Cephalic but non-vertex presentations (e.g. face, brow)

Normal covers only cephalic, vertex presentation.

Types of Fetal Malpresentation

Malpresentation: anything else apart from cephalic vertex presentation

[Ref]

Malpresentation type Prevalence Definition (presenting part) Main implications / complications Management approach
Breech 3-5% Buttocks / feet

See the full Breech Presentation management.

High Caesarean delivery rate

Vaginal delivery risks include:

  • Asphyxia (from umbilical cord compression)
  • Trauma
3 options:

  • ECV followed by vaginal delivery
  • Caesarean delivery
  • Vaginal breech delivery

See the full Breech Presentation management.

Shoulder (transverse lie) <0.5% Shoulder Spontaneous vaginal delivery is impossible

Complications:

  • Cord prolapse
  • Arm prolapse
  • Entrapped shoulder
  • Uterine rupture
Offer ECV at 36-37 weeks if diagnosed before labour

If ECV unsuccessful or labour has started → Caesarean delivery (often requiring classical vertical uterine incision)

Brow (subtype of cephalic) 0.12-0.2% Frontum (partially extended head) Can result in arrested labour

<1/3 can result in vaginal delivery without converting

Expectant management, as it often rotates to a deliverable position

If face presentation remains → Caesarean delivery

ECV or instrumental manipulation are NOT recommended

Face (subtype of cephalic) 0.1-0.12% Mentum (fully extended head) Spontaneous vaginal delivery is impossible

High perinatal mortality is associated with attempting vaginal manipulation

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