How to Prevent a Posterior Labor
Here are some ways to prevent a posterior labor…these exercises
should encourage baby to rotate to anterior. They should be
started at least 6 weeks before the due date for a first pregnancy
and 3-4 weeks before the due date for second and subsequent
pregnancies. Although don’t get discouraged if you are really
close to your due date, it’s really never too late to start!
Some babies turn right away with this amount of encouragement.
It should be noted these exercises won’t turn an anterior
baby posterior, so if you are not sure of position, do these
anyway, since they can’t hurt!
- Avoid all reclining positions. If you have a soft reclining
seat or couch, best to put a pillow under your bum and tilt
your pelvis forward.
- Keep knees below your pelvis at all times, back straight.
A large birth ball is the perfect ‘chair’ for this position.
Those nifty office chairs with knee rests are also great.
The goal is to keep the pelvis tilted forward at all times.
- Keep active, walk as much as possible.
- Practice pelvic rocks on your hands and knees every day for
minimum 3 times a day for 20 minutes and/or; Take up the knee-to-chest
position (sometimes called the playful puppy pose…chest to
the floor, bum up in the air) for an hour or so everyday.
Some people prefer this because it will prevent a posterior
baby from engaging until it is in a good position. (Once baby
engages posterior, it’s much less likely s/he will turn.)
- While this doesn’t sound like much fun, scrub your floors
on your hands and knees regularly. Crawling around in this
fashion is great for getting baby anterior.
- Talk to your baby; ask him/her to turn to anterior (or better
yet, ask him/her to turn to a position that will help labor…sometimes
there is a good reason for baby to be posterior).
- Visualize an anterior baby, preferably LOA (left occiput
anterior) with baby’s bum in your front, but slightly to the
left of your belly button.
- Sleep on your left side, with your left leg straight and
your right leg at a 90-degree angle supported by a pillow
or two. This creates a ‘hammock’ for your belly and will encourage
the baby to rotate.
- Avoid squatting unless you are sure baby is now anterior…squatting
can force a posterior baby into the pelvis before s/he rotates,
making it much less likely s/he will turn anterior without
being disengaged first.
- Relaxing in a warm bath and telling your baby you are happy
s/he is about to arrive can also make a world of difference!
Doesn’t hurt to try it.
Sometimes these measures will still not work. Perhaps it
could be because there’s a good reason your baby is posterior…maybe
that is the only way s/he can enter the pelvis, or it's possible
the placenta is in the way (for example, an anterior placenta
may predispose you to a posterior baby). Talk to your baby,
and ask your baby if you should take any extra measures to
turn him/her. If you feel comfortable that there isn't any
really good reason for baby to be posterior and the above
measures tried for a couple of weeks have not worked, you
might try the following in addition to the above exercises:
- Lie down on your back and put a rolled towel in the small
of your back to form an exaggerated arch. This will make a
posterior baby hyperextend their necks and will usually make
them turn.
- If baby is deeply engaged posterior, you may try
a slant board (as with a breech baby; a piece of wood or an
ironing board is propped up on a couch or chair and the mother
lays on it, on her back with her head pointing down) to try
to disengage the baby in order to try the first set of exercises
again. A relaxing tea, such as valerian or skullcap may also
help before trying the slant board.
- If you are certain of the baby’s position, assume the hands and knees position and
‘massage’ your baby or ‘encourage’ them into an anterior position.
Do it very gently…do not force the baby. This may be better
done with a midwife present, or someone to help monitor baby’s
heartbeat.
- Since babies tend to turn their backs toward warmth,
an ice pack on the back with warm towels on the mother’s belly
will sometimes encourage a baby to turn.
- Homeopathic Pulsatilla
has been known to help turn a baby. It apparently evens out
the muscles in the uterus, allowing baby to fit into an optimal
position
- Sometimes a posterior position is caused by a lack
of strength in your lower stomach muscles…in this case a belly
support or belly binding (a large sheet or towel wrapped tightly
around the belly for support) might help.
- If it’s a cord preventing
baby from turning, try perhaps rotating baby the opposite
direction (for example, at night try sleeping on your right
side instead of left). This can help ‘unwrap’ the baby and
encourage him/her to turn.
- Often, chiropractic adjustments
of the back and pelvis will be just what the baby needs to
rotate. A mother’s sacral area might be jammed or just tight,
and that, along with a misaligned tailbone, could force the
baby to become posterior. Chiropractic adjustments throughout
pregnancy should avoid this situation altogether.
- There is
also a chiropractic technique called "diaphragmatic release"
and is supposed to turn posterior babies every time. Ask your
chiropractor about it.
What to do if you go into labor and baby is still posterior:
- Don’t get too worried…the vast majority of posterior babies
rotate during labor and those who don’t are often born "sunny-side-up".
Some posteriors actually are born precipitously with no back
labor, depending on how well flexed the head is. Babies come
out!
- First thing is to get into a knee-to-chest position and stay
there for at least 45 minutes, or until baby turns. Be sure
to have lots of pillows on hand so you can stay in this position
comfortably for as long as is required.
- Sometimes doing stairs 2 at a time between contractions
(with a spotter on each side!) will jiggle the baby’s head
enough for it to turn or move the pelvic bones enough for
baby to turn.
- Belly lifting is another technique for when baby won’t turn
and dilation is slow. With someone supporting you from the
back, lean back, arching your spine, and with both hands around
your belly near the baby’s bum - pull up on it during a contraction.
This realigns the vectors so that baby’s head will put more
pressure on the cervix, helping it to dilate more quickly.
- A big pool filled with water will relieve a lot of the back
pain and will help baby to turn, so plan a waterbirth!
- Have someone press on the upper part of your sacrum, to hopefully
move the lower part away from baby’s head, lessening back
pain and hopefully giving baby more room in the pelvis to
turn.
- Sometimes something called the 'double hip squeeze' can give
baby more room in the outlet to come down if he/she is not
descending. Have your partner, or 2 helpers, press on each
side of your hips, with considerable force during each contraction.
This should force open the outlet of the pelvis to help baby
descend. This maneuver often lessens the pain for the mother
considerably.
- Sitting backwards on a toilet is a good way to loosen up
in any labor, but in a posterior labor that small bit of relaxation
in the pelvic area, combined with the forward leaning may
be just what the baby needs to turn.
Things your caregiver can do to help you out.
- Many midwives are able to manually rotate a posterior baby,
even if you are only a couple of centimeters dilated. Be certain
to discuss this with your caregiver before hand…there is always
the slight risk of turning a baby who wasn’t posterior.
- This might be helpful for those who aren’t sure exactly what
baby’s position is in…get in a knee-chest position and have
your caregiver push the baby’s head up out of the pelvis.
The baby’s head should come down in a more favorable position.
- Some midwives are able to do sterile water injections in
your back to alleviate the back pain in a posterior labor
and hopefully the pain relief helps the mother relax enough
so the baby can turn. This doesn’t always work however, either
the pain relief is incomplete or baby doesn’t turn anyhow.
It's worth a shot though (pun NOT intended!)
- It’s possible for your caregiver to jiggle your thighs (basically
grabbing the inside of your thighs and shaking really hard)
during labor to help relax your whole pelvis and ‘shake’ baby
into position. This has been known to work very well. Jiggling
the fatty part of the hips can help too. Your partner, a friend
or other birth attendants, of course can do this as well.
Many cesareans are done due to posterior or asynclitic presentation.
Working with a careprovider who believes in birth is easier
than fighting one who does not. Believe in yourself and the
process of birth. Repeat affirmations to yourself constantly.
Encourage yourself to believe that you are capable of delivering
your baby vaginally. Remember, however your birth turns out,
even if it's not the labor or birth you want, it WILL be the
labor and birth you need. :-)
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