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Babies Sometimes Injured During C-Section
About 1 in 100 babies delivered by cesarean
section are injured in the process, a new
study shows. The risk of injury is influenced
by the reasons for doing the c-section.
Dr. James M. Alexander, from the University
of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas,
and colleagues analyzed data from all 37,110
cesarean deliveries that took place at 13
academic centers between 1999 and 2000.
The overall rate of injury to the baby was
1.1 percent, according to the team's report
in the medical journal Obstetrics & Gynecology.
Wounds to the skin accounted for more than
half of the injuries. The next most common
injury was severe bruising of the head, followed
by broken collarbone, facial nerve damage,
injury to the chest-arm nerve network, and
skull fracture.
In women with a first-time c-section as well
as those who had previously undergone the
procedure, the highest rate of fetal injury
occurred following an attempt to deliver through
the birth canal using forceps or vacuum.
On the other hand, the lowest risk of injury
was associated with elective repeat cesarean
deliveries.
While c-section can prevent birth trauma
in certain circumstances, it can also cause
injury, Alexander and colleagues point out,
as the current findings illustrate. "Women
should be counseled that, although fetal injury
is uncommon, it is not absent in cesarean
delivery," they advise.