## Correct Answer: B. Emergency Cesarean section This is a **trial of labor after cesarean (TOLAC)** case with **fetal bradycardia** — the critical discriminator. In a woman with previous cesarean presenting in active labor (cervix 8 cm), fetal bradycardia signals **fetal hypoxia and potential uterine rupture**. The combination of maternal tachycardia + fetal bradycardia is a classic sign of **maternal hemorrhage and fetal distress**, both hallmarks of uterine rupture in TOLAC. Per ACOG and Indian guidelines (FOGSI), fetal bradycardia in TOLAC is an absolute indication for **immediate cesarean delivery** to prevent fetal death and maternal morbidity. At 8 cm dilation, vaginal delivery is not imminent enough to justify expectant management. Emergency cesarean section is the only safe option because it addresses the underlying pathology (presumed rupture or severe placental insufficiency) and delivers the fetus before irreversible hypoxic injury occurs. Instrumental delivery would waste critical time and risks further trauma to an already compromised fetus. Increasing oxytocin or ARM would worsen uterine stress and accelerate hemorrhage if rupture is occurring. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Instrumental delivery** — Instrumental delivery (forceps/vacuum) is contraindicated in fetal bradycardia because it delays definitive management and risks further fetal trauma in an already hypoxic fetus. TOLAC with fetal distress requires immediate cesarean, not operative vaginal delivery. This is a trap for students who think 'cervix 8 cm = close to vaginal delivery' and miss the life-threatening fetal status. **C. Increase oxytocin dose** — Increasing oxytocin in suspected uterine rupture (evidenced by fetal bradycardia + maternal tachycardia) is dangerous — it increases intrauterine pressure and worsens hemorrhage. This option traps students who focus only on 'active labor' and forget that fetal bradycardia is a **contraindication** to augmentation. TOLAC with fetal distress demands cesarean, not acceleration. **D. ARM** — Artificial rupture of membranes in fetal bradycardia is contraindicated because it removes the protective cushion around the fetus and may precipitate cord prolapse or accelerate hemorrhage if uterine rupture is occurring. ARM is a trap for students who think 'labor augmentation' without recognizing that fetal distress is a red flag for rupture, not a reason to continue labor. ## High-Yield Facts - **Fetal bradycardia + maternal tachycardia in TOLAC** = uterine rupture until proven otherwise; emergency cesarean is mandatory. - **TOLAC success rate** in India is ~60–70%, but fetal distress is an absolute contraindication to trial continuation. - **Cervix 8 cm does NOT override fetal distress**; maternal and fetal safety take precedence over vaginal delivery attempt. - **Uterine rupture signs**: fetal bradycardia, maternal tachycardia, vaginal bleeding, abdominal pain, loss of station — any combination mandates immediate cesarean. - **FOGSI guidelines**: TOLAC is safe in selected women with one prior low-transverse cesarean, but fetal distress is an absolute indication for emergency delivery. ## Mnemonics **TOLAC RED FLAGS (STOP trial immediately)** **B**radycardia (fetal), **L**oss of station, **E**xcessive bleeding, **E**xcruciating pain, **D**ecelerations (variable/late). Any one = emergency cesarean. **Fetal Bradycardia in Labor = RUPTURE** **R**upture (uterine), **U**rgent cesarean, **P**lacental abruption, **T**ransverse lie, **U**mbilical cord prolapse, **R**esuscitation needed, **E**mergency delivery. Think 'RUPTURE' when you see bradycardia in TOLAC. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs 'cervix 8 cm' with labor progress to lure students into choosing instrumental delivery or augmentation, overlooking that **fetal bradycardia is a life-threatening emergency** that overrides proximity to vaginal delivery. The trap is confusing 'advanced dilation' with 'safe to continue labor'. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian obstetric practice, TOLAC is increasingly offered in tertiary centers, but fetal distress in TOLAC is a **medical emergency** — many maternal deaths and fetal losses occur when teams delay cesarean hoping for vaginal delivery. The moment you see fetal bradycardia + maternal tachycardia, call the OT; do not wait for cervical dilation to progress. _Reference: DC Dutta's Textbook of Obstetrics (3rd edn), Ch. 23 (TOLAC); FOGSI Guidelines on TOLAC; Harrison Ch. 429 (Obstetric Complications)_
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