Planned caesareans are about 7 times less likely to result in complications, compared with emergency C-sections.
And now, doctors can predict if women might have difficulty giving birth, so they can offer them planned operations instead. New Scientist reports.
Some doctors measure the size of the pelvis to estimate how difficult birth might be (a technique called pelvimetry), but this doesn't take into account the shape of the baby's head or the curvature of the mother’s pelvis.
"If you have a small pelvis, it doesn't necessarily mean that you can't deliver, and even women with a large pelvis may need mechanical help," says study researcher Olivier Ami of Université Paris-Sud. "The question is: can that fetus pass through that pelvis?"
Watch a groovy video of a simulated baby navigating around a pelvis.
They tested their technique using their software called Predibirth and MRI scans taken of 24 women before they gave birth.
"The idea is to transform the majority of emergency C-sections into planned ones," Ami says.
The work was presented at the Radiological Society of North America meeting in Chicago at the end of last month.
From New Scientist.
Image: Predibirth
This post was originally published on Smartplanet.com