During pregnancy, obstetricians allow pregnant mothers to regularly perform telepathological monitoring to assess the health of the foetus within the womb. What are the reasons for this
As we know, foetal heart surveillance is done through the electronic foetal heart monitor, which allows continuous observation and recording of the dynamics of the foetal heart rate, as well as a simultaneous depiction of uterus contractions and foetal movements, and an assessment of the inside foetal womb through the relationship between the three。
Patronal cardiac monitoring refers to a low baseline variation of the foetal heart rate。
The normal foetal heart rate is based on a baseline of 110-160 times/min, with a baseline variation of medium variation (6-25 times/min) and a marked acceleration of the foetal heart rate at the time of cell movement, which is the normal nst (i. E. No stress)。
As foetal heart monitoring is a small baseline variation, and speed is not apparent when the foetus moves, a situation which in the sense of guardianship itself is likely to have intra-uterine oxygen, but since the fetus also has a rest period within the womb, i. E. A sleep cycle, which is not always moving, during the foetal sleep cycle, it is shown that foetal heart monitoring is flat, so we cannot determine from a single foetal heart monitoring that it is impervious, and we need further monitoring. If it is again monitored or if the foetal heart monitoring is flat, we can stimulate the abdominal organs appropriately, if it is caused by foetal sleep, if the foetal heart monitoring is flat, if the fetus wakes up, and the foetal monitoring is consistent with normal changes above and does not occur at the baseline. If irritation or performance baseline variations are small, consideration is given to intrauterine oxygen, which can be observed in low flow。
The mother's condition, the pelvis, the size of the child, the place of birth, etc., are taken into account in the early selection of the method of delivery。




