Main content
NCLEX-RN
Course: NCLEX-RN > Unit 19
Lesson 2: Pregnancy and pregnancy complications- Physiology of pregnancy
- Diagnosis of pregnancy
- Pregnancy physiology I
- Labor and delivery
- Postpartum physiology
- Preeclampsia
- Placenta previa
- Placental abruption
- Placenta accreta
- UTIs in pregnancy
- Blood conditions in pregnancy
- Sheehan syndrome
- Postpartum hemorrhage
- Uterine inversion
- Diabetes in pregnancy
- Preterm labor
- C-section
© 2023 Khan AcademyTerms of usePrivacy PolicyCookie Notice
Labor and delivery
Visit us (http://www.khanacademy.org/science/healthcare-and-medicine) for health and medicine content or (http://www.khanacademy.org/test-prep/mcat) for MCAT related content. These videos do not provide medical advice and are for informational purposes only. The videos are not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Always seek the advice of a qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read or seen in any Khan Academy video. Created by Nauroz Syed.
Want to join the conversation?
- How long is the active phase and transition phase ?(2 votes)
- The first stage of labor (stage of dilatation) is divided into three phases.
1. Latent phase – 0-3 cm cervical dilatation; contractions are short and mild lasting 20-40 seconds and occurring approximately every 5-10 minutes.
2. Active phase – 4-7 cm cervical dilatation; contractions grow stronger, lasting 40-60 seconds and occur at approximately every 3-5 minutes.
3. Transition phase – 8-10 cm cervical dilatation; contractions reach their peak of intensity, occurring every 2-3 minutes with a duration of 60-90 seconds.(3 votes)
- Are the first 3 stages called: 1) dilation stage 2) expulsion stage and 3) placental stage? That's what I was taught in class. Is that universal terminology for those stages? 2:44(2 votes)
- That's correct. I'm not sure of universality, but those are the stages mentioned a few videos previous to this one.(2 votes)
- When does the water breaking come in?(1 vote)
- babies can also be born in the caul without complications. it's possible for the amniotic membranes to never break. the membranes are then broken and baby will probably be suctioned. according to legend a baby born in the caul will never drown(4 votes)
- At, the drug is called pitocin, which is an artificial form of the hormone oxytocin. Oxytocin is the hormone the body naturally releases to create contractions, when the artificial form, Pitocin, is added, oxytocin stops producing, and much stronger contractions begin. It is a drug that can save lives, especially when uterine bleeding needs to be stopped after the birth of placenta, but it also can cause the baby to go into distress due to the extremely intense uterine contractions it causes, leading to cesarean. 9:38(2 votes)
- When does the water break?(1 vote)
- It varies greatly. Sometimes it breaks early in labor, sometimes the doctor has to break the amniotic sac to "move things along" later in labor.(2 votes)
- Does the bloody show and the water break (amniotic sac break) both happen in the latent phase of labor? How far apart do they happen? And when should a doctor be called?(0 votes)
- I also notice that a lot of pregnancy is in three...three trimesters, three labor stages, probably more too.(2 votes)
Video transcript
- [Voiceover] I thought
the movies taught me everything I needed to know
about labor and delivery. The water breaks, mom yells, everyone rushes in to the hospital, and after a few breathing exercise and two or three really
hard and loud pushes, the baby arrives. Well, reality couldn't
be further from that. For one thing, most of the time, labor is preceded by a few signs that tell the mom that
the baby is about to come. One of those signs is lightening. One of those signs that tells the mom that the baby is about
to make his or her debut is lightening or people
like to call the drop. And what it refers to is the
baby's head engaging with and sort of settling into mom's pelvis which the mom can feel. It feels like the baby is
sitting lower in the abdomen and this is my sort of
diagram depicting that. So I don't know if you can tell but this is the pelvis and this here, this here is the baby. And you can see that the baby's head is sort of nestled into and
settled into mom's pelvis. And that's called lightening. Another one of those signs that tells mom that baby is about to come is
Braxton Hicks contractions. They're called Braxton Hicks contractions sometimes called practice contractions, and that's exactly what they are. They're uterine contractions that occur as early as
the first trimester. But unlike real labor contractions, they're infrequent, they're irregular and they don't occur with a pattern. As delivery approaches,
Braxton Hicks contractions tend to become more frequent and they tend to become
more uncomfortable. And then another big
sign of impending labor is loss of the mucus plug which the mucus plug
is the mucus that seals the opening to the cervix. So it seals the endocervical canal. The canal that's inside the cervix. And when the cervix loosens up and it dilates during labor, the plug falls out. And sometimes when that
mucus plugs is blood-tinged it's referred to as the bloody show. It's referred to as the bloody show. I always wondered what
that was, the bloody show. Okay, so those are some of
the signs of impending labor but what on earth is labor? Well, labor is when you have
regular uterine contractions that lead to changes in the cervix, in the passage of the baby. So the contractions have to be regular. They have to be patterned and they have to lead to
some change in the cervix, and that's what labor is. And we split labor up
into three distinct stages with each stage kind
of having its own goal. There's the first stage of labor. So there's the first stage of labor, the second stage of labor, second stage of labor, and the third stage of labor. And we're gonna go through each of these stages independently starting with the first stage of labor, which is the longest stage of labor. The first stage of labor is all about the cervix becoming fully dilated. And what that means, what it means for the cervix to become fully dilated is that the cervix goes from being thick and completely shut to thinning out and opening up 10 centimeters. 10 centimeters is what we
call completely dilated. And that's a lot of change, right? It doesn't happen all at once instead it happens in
three distinct phases. The first stage of labor
has three phases to it. And the first of those phases
is called the latent phase. The latent phase, right? During the latent phase, contractions become stronger, they become more frequent
and more regular. And most of what's
happening during this phase is the thinning or the
effacement of the cervix. That looks something like this. You can see the cervix is
becoming thinner, right? Not too much dilatation is occurring. In fact at most, the cervix will become three centimeters dilated
max during this phase. This phase, the latent phase is actually the most variable phase
from woman to woman. For a woman who's had kids before we expect it to last
anywhere from 10 to 12 hours but for a woman who's
having her very first baby, it can take as long as 20 hours. So that's a lot of variability. Okay, so we hope that by
the end of the latent phase the cervix is maximally thinned out so that during the next phase which is called the active phase, the active phase, we can focus on the dilatation
of the cervix, right? During the active phase, the cervix goes from being two
to three centimeters dilated to becoming eight to
nine centimeters dilated. It sort of looks like this, right? You can see that the
cervix is becoming dilated or the space is increasing. And this phase is what you can call the most predictable phase of labor. It's so predictable that
we measure it to rate. By that I mean that in a first time mom, the cervix has to dilate at least 1.2 centimeters per hour and that's in a first time mom. And for a mom who's had
multiple kids in the past, the cervix has to dilate quicker so at least 1.5 centimeters an hour. It's that predictable, that predictable that we
have this rate for it. So much so that if the
cervix isn't dilating at the rate that we expect it to, we get really concerned. That leaves us with the last phase which is called the deceleration. The deceleration phase which some people like
to call the transition. Transition, so the deceleration
phase and transition are two interchangeable
terms for this phase. During this phase, the
cervix continues to dilate but more slowly than it
did in the active phase. In some women, this isn't
as much a separate phase as it is kind of an extension
of the active phase. So it kind of blends in
with the previous phase. Also the baby passes lower into the pelvis and deeper into the birth
canal during this phase. Okay, so now we have a
fully effaced, right, so fully thinned out and
a fully dilated cervix. The second stage of labor marks the period between when you have
a fully dilated cervix to the delivery of the baby. For a lot of people, this is what's known as the pushing stage. And usually, usually, this
should take less than an hour in a woman who's done it before and less than two hours
in a first time mom. But keep in mind that the use
of something like an epidural can prolong this stage
so it slows things down. Okay and then finally the
final stage is stage three which is the period between
the delivery of the baby and the delivery of the placenta, and this shouldn't take
any longer than 30 minutes. So I hope that this has
taken out some of the mystery out of what normally occurs during labor. But what about when things
don't occur normally? What about when labor isn't
progressing as quickly or as effectively as it should? Well if that's the case then we need to evaluate the three P's. If labor isn't progressing
the way that it should we evaluate the three P's. The first P is powers, right? The first P is powers. The second P is passenger. Passenger. Have powers, passengers. And the last P is passage. So the three P's, powers,
passenger and passages is what we sort of evaluate if labor isn't going
the way that it should, if it's abnormal. Powers, the first P refers
to uterine contractions or more specifically to
the force that's generated by the uterine muscles when they contract. If there is an abnormality during labor, we have to ask ourselves, is it because the uterine contractions aren't occurring frequently enough? Are they not lasting long enough? Or maybe are they not strong enough? And we can assess that
simply through observation. Typically we think that
during active labor, we should have about
three to five contractions every 10 minutes, right? We should have three to five contractions every 10 minutes. With each contraction lasting somewhere between 40 and 60 seconds, and each contraction being strong enough that the uterus feels
firm when you palpate it, when you touch it. Or if you prefer to use
more objective measure there are these devices called intrauterine pressure catheters that you can actually
insert through the vagina and onto the uterus that will give you a numerical measure. So a more objective measure of how strong each contraction is. Either way, we know that
contractions during labor have to be adequately frequent and adequately strong to achieve labor. And if they are not, we can
use a drug such as oxytocin. There is this drug called oxytocin which causes the uterus to contract to sort of help us along. And you also have to think about the second contributor to powers and that's the bearing
down efforts of the mom, and you have to think about
if those are strong enough. If the mom is sort of pushing effectively and strongly enough. Okay, so if powers isn't the problem then we need to consider
the second P, passenger which the passenger is
of course the fetus. Some things to consider about the fetus include what its orientation is. Whether the head, the feet or the shoulders are
delivering first, right? Because that can affect thing. We have to consider
whether the head is flexed or whether it's extended, and of course how big the fetus' head is is also important to think about if you're having any abnormality in labor. And then finally there's
a last P or passage which refers to mom's sort of bony pelvis and the soft tissues of the birth canal. So the cervix and the
pelvic floor muscles, right? Abnormal labor could be the
result of something we call cephalo, something we call cephalopelvic, cephalopelvic disproportion. Abnormal labor can be the result of cephalopelvic disproportion. Cephalo means head. Pelvic refers to pelvis, right? So we're talking about a disproportion between the baby's head
and the mom's pelvis. Basically, the baby's head
can't fit through mom's pelvis either because baby's too big or mom's pelvis is too small. In either case, since you really can't change either variable, C-section tends to be the only sort of treatment for this problem. All right, so that's a brief,
very brief overview of labor. Hopefully the next time you
see a Hollywood delivery you'll appreciate exactly
how much they're leaving out.