## Correct Answer: B. Occipitoposterior Infra-umbilical flattening of the abdomen combined with fetal heart sounds heard over the lateral side are classic clinical signs of occipitoposterior (OP) position. In OP position, the fetal occiput is directed towards the maternal sacrum, causing the fetal back to be anterolateral rather than directly anterior. This results in two key findings: (1) **infra-umbilical flattening** — the lower abdomen appears flattened because the fetal back does not bulge anteriorly in the lower segment, and (2) **lateral location of fetal heart sounds** — the fetal heart, which lies on the anterior aspect of the fetal chest, is heard over the lateral flank of the mother's abdomen rather than centrally. These signs are pathognomonic for OP position. The OP position occurs in approximately 10–15% of term pregnancies in Indian populations and is associated with increased risk of prolonged labour, instrumental delivery, and perineal trauma. Recognition of OP position antenatally allows for counselling and preparation for potential complications during labour. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Brow** — Brow presentation is a deflexed attitude where the fetal head is partially extended. It presents with the area between the anterior fontanelle and anterior orbital ridge. Brow presentation does not produce infra-umbilical flattening or lateral shift of fetal heart sounds; instead, it typically causes a more prominent, centrally located bulge. This is a rare presentation (0.1–0.3%) and is not associated with the described clinical signs. **C. Right dorso–anterior** — Right dorso-anterior (RDA) position is a well-flexed, anterior position where the fetal back is on the right side and anteriorly placed. In RDA, the fetal back bulges prominently in the anterior abdomen, producing **anterior fullness** rather than infra-umbilical flattening. Fetal heart sounds would be heard centrally or slightly to the right anteriorly, not laterally. RDA is the most common position at term and does not match the clinical findings. **D. Knee** — Knee presentation is an extremely rare abnormal presentation (incidence <0.1%) where the fetal knee presents first. It is associated with severe flexion deformity or fetal anomalies and is not compatible with normal fetal anatomy or the described clinical signs. Knee presentation would not produce the characteristic infra-umbilical flattening and lateral heart sounds seen in OP position. ## High-Yield Facts - **Infra-umbilical flattening + lateral fetal heart sounds** = occipitoposterior position until proven otherwise. - **OP position incidence** is 10–15% at term in Indian populations; associated with prolonged labour and increased instrumental delivery rates. - **Fetal back location** in OP is posterolateral, causing the anterior abdomen (especially below umbilicus) to appear flat rather than bulging. - **Fetal heart sounds** are heard over the lateral flank in OP because the heart lies on the anterior fetal chest, which faces laterally when the back is posterior. - **RDA (most common position)** produces anterior fullness and centrally heard heart sounds—opposite of OP findings. ## Mnemonics **OP = Lateral + Flat** **O**ccipitoposterior → **O**cciput **P**osterior → back **P**osterior → belly **F**lat (infra-umbilical) + heart sounds **L**ateral. Use when examining a term pregnant woman and you see a flat lower abdomen with lateral heart sounds. ## NBE Trap NBE may lure students who remember "lateral heart sounds" but confuse it with anterior positions (RDA, LOA) where heart sounds are also heard off-centre. The key discriminator is the **combination** of infra-umbilical flattening (not anterior fullness) with lateral heart sounds—this pair is pathognomonic for OP, not anterior positions. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian obstetric practice, OP position is often detected during antenatal examination in the third trimester. Recognition allows the obstetrician to counsel the patient about increased risk of prolonged labour and to prepare for potential need for augmentation or instrumental delivery—critical for reducing maternal morbidity in resource-limited settings where operative facilities may be distant. _Reference: DC Dutta's Textbook of Obstetrics, Ch. 24 (Mechanism of Labour); Bailey & Love's Short Practice of Surgery, Ch. 73 (Obstetrics)_
Sign up free to access AI-powered MCQ practice with detailed explanations and adaptive learning.