Pelvic dimensions and hypotheses on duration of active second stage of
labour
Tilde Broach Ostborg
Stavanger University Hospital
TM Eggebo
Trondheium University Hospital
We would like to thank Jan Novák and Petr Sedlak for their interest and
comments to our manuscript. We found that increasing BMI was associated
with shorter estimated median duration of the active second stage of
labour.1
We could not find any obvious causal mechanism for our findings; but
suggested some possible explanations. The shorter active second stage
may be related to increased abdominal pressure with increasing BMI, or
perhaps increased strength when pushing.2, 3 Increased
infiltration of fat in the muscular pelvic floor may decrease its
strength and resistance.4 The presence of fat in the
birth canal of obese women may delay the urge to bear down, thereby
postponing active pushing until the head is lower in the maternal
pelvis.
Novak et al. measured the bi-ilac and bi-cristal diameters of the
greater pelvis and found a broader pelvis in individuals with a history
of obesity from adolescence.5 We supposed that there
would be an association between the size of the greater pelvis and the
size of the birth canal. We agree to the limitations commented by Novák
and Sedlak. However, our proposed causal mechanisms are merely
hypotheses, and cannot be accepted nor rejected based on current
knowledge.
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