## Correct Answer: C. Emergency C-section Umbilical cord prolapse is an obstetric emergency with fetal mortality rates exceeding 50% if not managed urgently. The discriminating fact is that once the cord prolapses through the cervix into the vagina or beyond, it becomes compressed between the fetal presenting part and the maternal pelvis, causing acute umbilical blood flow obstruction and fetal hypoxia. Emergency cesarean section is the definitive management because it immediately relieves cord compression and delivers the fetus before irreversible hypoxic damage occurs. In India, where many deliveries occur in peripheral centers with limited neonatal resuscitation facilities, rapid transport to a tertiary center for cesarean delivery is the standard of care per FOGSI guidelines. The time from diagnosis to delivery should be <30 minutes to maximize fetal salvage. Vaginal delivery, even with instrumental assistance, risks further cord compression and is contraindicated. Any delay in surgical intervention significantly worsens perinatal outcomes. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Push cord back into cervix** — This is wrong because manual replacement of prolapsed cord is futile and dangerous. The cord will prolapse again with uterine contractions, and manipulation risks cord trauma, thrombosis, and vasospasm. This outdated approach wastes critical time—every minute of cord compression increases fetal acidosis. NBE may include this to test whether students confuse it with the temporary measure of elevating the presenting part. **B. Head-low, lift part, fill bladder** — This is wrong because while these are temporizing measures (Trendelenburg position, elevating hips, bladder filling to displace the presenting part), they are NOT definitive treatment. These measures buy time during transport to the operating room but do NOT relieve cord compression permanently. They should accompany emergency cesarean delivery, not replace it. NBE traps students who memorize the 'management steps' without understanding that these are adjuncts, not primary therapy. **D. Vaginal delivery with forceps** — This is wrong because instrumental vaginal delivery in cord prolapse risks catastrophic fetal outcome. Forceps application takes time, increases intrapelvic pressure, and worsens cord compression. Even if delivery is achieved, the delay in relieving compression causes severe fetal hypoxia and acidosis. This option tests whether students confuse cord prolapse with other labor complications where instrumental delivery may be appropriate (e.g., prolonged second stage without prolapse). ## High-Yield Facts - **Cord prolapse mortality** exceeds 50% without urgent intervention; cesarean delivery within 30 minutes significantly improves fetal survival. - **Cord compression** between fetal presenting part and maternal pelvis causes acute umbilical blood flow obstruction and rapid fetal hypoxia. - **Temporizing measures** (Trendelenburg, bladder filling, elevating hips) are adjuncts during transport but do NOT replace emergency cesarean delivery. - **Risk factors** for cord prolapse include prematurity, breech presentation, transverse lie, polyhydramnios, and artificial rupture of membranes. - **FOGSI guidelines** recommend emergency cesarean delivery as the standard of care; vaginal delivery is contraindicated in cord prolapse. ## Mnemonics **CORD PROLAPSE = CESAREAN** Cord prolapse is an obstetric emergency requiring immediate Cesarean delivery. No time for temporizing measures alone—every minute counts. Use this to remember: prolapse = surgery, not expectancy. **ABC of Cord Prolapse Management** A = Avoid delay, B = Bladder fill (temporary), C = Cesarean delivery (definitive). The bladder fill is a holding measure during transport; cesarean is the goal. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs cord prolapse with temporizing measures (Trendelenburg, bladder filling) to lure students into selecting these as the primary answer, when in fact they are only adjuncts during urgent transport to the operating room. The trap tests whether students understand that cord prolapse is a true surgical emergency, not a condition managed conservatively. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian peripheral centers where cesarean facilities may not be immediately available, the key is rapid transport to a tertiary center while maintaining Trendelenburg position and bladder filling. A 30-minute decision-to-delivery interval is the gold standard; delays beyond this significantly increase neonatal morbidity and mortality, particularly in resource-limited settings where neonatal intensive care may be unavailable. _Reference: DC Dutta's Textbook of Obstetrics, Ch. 24 (Complications of Labor); FOGSI Clinical Practice Guidelines on Obstetric Emergencies_
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