Cardiotocography (CTG) is a cornerstone of intrapartum fetal monitoring but requires a minimum of 30 minutes for a reliable trace, creating a significant bottleneck in high-volume, low-resource settings like Egypt As it is time-consuming and resource intensive. This leads to delays in care and increased workload for healthcare providers. A shortened, yet accurate, CTG protocol could drastically improve workflow and resource allocation without compromising fetal safety.
In Egypt, labor wards in tertiary hospitals are often overcrowded with limited CTG machines and midwives. The requirement of a minimum 30-minute CTG trace creates bottlenecks in care and increases staff workload. Previous studies suggest that the first 10 minutes of a CTG may capture the essential features of fetal well-being. If validated, a shortened CTG could improve efficiency in high-volume maternity units without compromising neonatal outcomes. Using umbilical venous pH as the gold standard for fetal acid-base status, this study will directly compare the diagnostic accuracy of a 10-minute versus a 30-minute CTG protocol in low-risk laboring women. The aim is to evaluate whether a 10-minute CTG tracing is non-inferior to the standard 30 minute CTG in fetal assessment and predicting fetal acid-base status (umbilical venous pH) in term, low-risk pregnancies during the active first stage of labor.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
200
To compare the diagnostic accuracy (sensitivity, specificity, PPV, NPV) of a 10 minute CTG versus a standard 30-minute CTG in fetal monitoring and well being
Using fetal acidemia defined as (umbilical venous pH \< 7.25) as reference in detecting fetal will being and comparing results with 10-min \& 30-min CTG monitoring to evaluate diagnostic accuracy of both in detecting fetal acidemia.
Time frame: Immediately after birth
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