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Portsmouth operative delivery trial: a comparison vacuum extraction and forceps delivery
Authors:ALDO VACCA  Senior Registrar  ADRIAN GRANT  Epidemiologist    GEOFFREY WYATT  Senior Registrar   IAIN CHALMERS  Director
Affiliation:Departments of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, St Mary's Hospital, Milton Road, Portsmouth, Hants PO3 6AD;National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit, Radcliffe Infirmary, Oxford OX2 6HE, UK;Department of Paediatrics, St Mary's Hospital, Milton Road, Portsmouth, Hants PO3 6AD
Abstract:Summary. A total of 304 women, for whom operative delivery was considered necessary in the second stage of labour, were randomly assigned to delivery by vacuum extraction or forceps. Of those allocated to forceps a higher proportion of babies were actually delivered with the allocated instrument; however, the caesarean section rate was also higher in this group. Maternal trauma, use of analgesia and blood loss at delivery were significantly less in the group allocated to vacuum extraction. Vacuum extraction did, however, appear to predispose to an increase in mild neonatal jaundice. More serious neonatal morbidity was rare in both groups and the trial was of insufficient size to rule out a clinically important differential effect of the two instruments on these measures of outcome. Another trial is now needed to address this still open question more rigorously.
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