Home (Breech position)
Home  
 
 
Home » Pregnancy & Parenting » Breech position


 

Breech position

Pregnancy & Parenting Breech birthBreech presentation

Breech Position and Breech Birth - Treatment Overview

By the 36th week of most pregnancies, the fetus naturally turns head-down (vertex). In this position, the fetus is ready for a head-first delivery through the birth canal.

 


Breech Position and Breech Birth - Exams and Tests

You are most likely to discover that your fetus is in the breech position during a routine prenatal exam late in your pregnancy. Your doctor: ...

Breech Position and Breech Birth
Date updated: April 28, 2008
Bets Davis, MFA
Content provided by Healthwise
Topic Overview ...

Breech Position
What is the best way to deliver a breech baby?
Breech Position
Your doctor may examine you or perform an ultrasound and tell you that your baby is in a breech position.

Breech position and delivery
vertical; head; down; birth; canal; breech; ultrasound; caesarean; section;
What is a breech position?
By around the eighth month most babies will be in a vertical, head down position in the birth canal.

Breech position - At birth, the baby is positioned with feet or bottom toward the cervix
Caput succedaneum - The swelling of the baby's scalp during labor ...

breech position
A baby is said to be breech presentation, or breech position, when it is "bottom down" rather than "head down" in the uterus just before birth. Either the baby's bottom or feet would be born first.

Breech Position - Term for a baby positioned, at birth, with his or her feet or bottom towards the cervix.
C
Cafe-au-lait Spots - Term for brown birthmarks.

How is breech position treated?
Sometimes it is possible for a doctor to turn a baby from a breech position to a head-down position by using a procedure called an external cephalic version Opens New Window.

Breech position.
In a breech position, the baby is positioned so that he would be born bottom first instead of headfirst.
A c-section eliminates many of the complications that could arise from a vaginal breech birth.
A large baby.
Placenta previa.

Breech position of an unborn baby is one of the most common reasons for doing a C-section. C-sections are done, of course, for problems, and the problem with breech babies is that the head comes out last.

breech position (breech puh-ZI-shuhn) - When the baby's bottom or feet are facing down right before birth.
Previous PageNext Page
Discuss this article ...

- Breech position : The baby’s feet or bottom entering the birth canal first instead of the head.
- Traverse position : Here, the placenta(organ that nourishes the baby) has problems and this causes bleeding during labor delivery.

The breech position means that the baby's bottom or buttocks are born first. This happens in about 1 of every 100 births.

Missed Breech Position
Position of Baby Local Resources
Pregnancy and Birth: Pregnancy Centers Links ...

My baby is in a breech position. What does this mean?
What if my baby is still breech towards the end of my pregnancy?
If my baby is in a breech position when I go into labour, will I have to have a caesarean?

- Is your baby in breech position? Can you turn a breech baby? Find out about your options.
- How to encourage your baby into the best position for birth.
- Considering a waterbirth? Find out more.

The baby was in breech position until about 34 weeks, when it turned over. From then on I knew that it was usually facing toward my right side, from the position of its feet and buttocks. I thought the baby was gentle; it never kicked me very hard.

In a complete breech position, he is butt-first with knees bent; in a frank breech, the legs are extended up, with feet near the head; if one leg is lowered over the cervix it is a footling breech.

Your baby is in the breech position. Whether all breech babies should be delivered by Caesarean is a matter of debate.

In this method the cervix is diated by use of forceps to grasp and turn fetus in breech position. Then the fetus is withdrawn and only head of the fetus is left inside cervix. Then the head is collapsed by suction of brain matter from the skull.

Breech position is normal in the second and early third trimester, however, by 36 or 37 weeks, most babies are head down. If not, we can try to turn the baby (a version).

None known to prevent the original breech position.
For some, a slanted board exercise where the mother lies with feet raised higher than her head for several minutes a few times a day.

The Seated or Full Breech Position - In the vertical, with the buttocks in the basin and legs folded. The head stays in the upper part of the womb. Breech presentations occur in less than 5% of deliveries.

The common medical reasons for having a Cesarean section (C section) are a baby in a breech position, a baby in a shoulder-first position, too large a head, prolonged labor, placenta blocking the birth canal and fetal distress.

There are lots of explanations why your baby might be in breech position (head up) before delivery, including structural limitations in your uterus and carrying multiples (so there's no room to flip).

Types of breech positions
Why do babies stay breech?
How do I know?
Importance of an ultrasound
Vaginal breech birth
Health concerns, vaginal breech
Some women's experiences
ECV turning the baby, History
Likely success of ECV ...

How will I know if my baby is in the breech position?
There are generally no identifiable symptoms. However, some women can tell the position of the baby by where they feel it kicking.

If your baby is in a breech position, your doctor may try an External Cephalic Version procedure. This is where they try to make your baby move by pushing your bump with their hands, guided by an ultrasound scan.

- Your one baby is lying in a breech position
- You've got complications such as placenta praevia or pre-eclampsia
- You've got a health condition such as epilepsy
- You're less than 38 weeks pregnant when you go into labour (some areas say 37 weeks) ...

It is less accurate if the baby is in a breech position or the amniotic fluid is low. However, remember it is not 100 percent.

Partial Breech Extraction - An operation for the delivery of a fets that is presenting in the breech position.

In about 3-4 percent of pregnancies, the baby approaches full-term by presenting in breech position - meaning it is bottom down, rather than head down.
Find more:
Birth Terms
Labour Terms
Pregnancy glossary index ...

At 28 weeks of pregnancy 25% of babies are still in the breech position.

Breech Presentation
Birth in which the baby comes out feet, knees or buttocks first. Breech positioning is relatively uncommon, occurring in fewer than five percent of all births.
C ...

He could be lying with either his head or his bottom down - known as the breech position - although babies can change their position up to 36 weeks, and sometimes even during labour.

Pregnancy and the Quad Marker Screen
Alpha-Fetoprotein (AFP) in Blood
Biophysical Profile (BPP)
Breech Position and Breech Birth-Exams and Tests
Chorionic Villus Sampling (CVS)
Contraction Stress Test
See All Pregnancy Tests Topics ...

...n for birth, called vertex position. When a baby does not turn and has his head up and feet down, it is referred to as "breech position" and can lead to a cesarean section or difficult birth. Certain exercises might encourag...
Read More ...

External cephalic version (ECV) - Procedure done late in pregnancy in which doctor manually attempts to move a baby from the breech position into the normal head-down position.
F ...

or 'scheduled cesarean', and means that it is a cesarean section delivery which has been scheduled at some point during the pregnancy, before labor has begun. Planned c-sections are sometimes chosen for reasons of multiple gestation, breech ...

A multiple pregnancy with three or more means a crowded uterus, in which the placenta or umbilical cords may be compressed during labor. A cesarean also may be necessary if any of the babies is in a breech position (feet or buttocks down) or ...

If your baby is not receiving enough oxygen, which could result in permanent brain damage.
If you are too tired.
Your caregivers may suggest forceps if your baby is coming feet first or in a breech position ...

See also: Pregnancy, Delivery, Vagina, Pregnant, Uterus