The documented association between heavy meconium in early labor and increased perinatal morbidity and mortality has alerted physicians to the presence of a potential high-risk fetal condition and to the possible need for immediate fetal blood pH determination. The purpose of this study was to determine whether antepartum fetal assessment can predict whether a postterm fetus with heavy meconium in early labor is at low or high risk for an adverse perinatal outcome. Eight hundred thirty-nine postterm patients were followed with antepartum testing, consisting of twice-weekly fetal heart rate (FHR) testing and ultrasonic amniotic fluid volume estimation. Overall, patients with heavy meconium in early labor had a significantly greater frequency of fetal distress. However, when women with heavy meconium in early labor were separated according to their antepartum testing results, those with normal results were found to have no greater risk for fetal distress or perinatal morbidity than women with normal testing and subsequently clear amniotic fluid. These findings suggest that postterm patients with heavy meconium in early labor and normal antepartum testing can be managed in labor in the same manner as low-risk patients without meconium.

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