Objective: To determine whether maternal or fetal factors, other than vacuum-assisted delivery, play a role in neonatal retinal hemorrhage, and whether correlates are similar in retinal hemorrhage after spontaneous vaginal delivery.
Methods: A cross-section of assisted deliveries at an urban hospital (n = 156) over 7 months were compared with contemporaneous spontaneous vaginal deliveries (n = 122). A subset of assisted deliveries (n = 87) was prospectively randomized to forceps or vacuum-assisted delivery by sealed envelope. Maternal and neonatal biometric data were collected, and Apgar scores, umbilical artery blood gas analysis, and neonatal ophthalmologic evaluations were performed.
Results: Moderate to severe retinal hemorrhage was found in 18% of spontaneous, 13% of forceps, 28% of vacuum-assisted, and 50% of sequential vacuum and forceps-assisted deliveries. Fetal distress (P < .008), vacuum-assisted delivery (P < .02), decreased birth weight for gestation (P < .004), umbilical artery pH less than 7.20 (P < .004), and second stage of labor less than 30 minutes (P < .05) were most closely associated with increased degrees of retinal hemorrhage. Maternal parity, preeclampsia, length of labor, and head circumference were not correlated with retinal hemorrhage. Vacuum-assisted delivery among low birth weight infants (P < .0001), short second stage of labor (P < .006), fetal acidosis (P < .045), and sequential use of vacuum and forceps for assisted delivery (P < .005) formed a logistic model that correctly predicted 81% of moderate to severe retinal hemorrhage cases. Logistic analysis of the randomized assisted deliveries gave similar results.
Conclusions: Maternal and fetal factors other than vacuum-assisted delivery are significant correlates of moderate to severe retinal hemorrhage. Vacuum-assisted delivery among small for gestational age infants is closely correlated with moderate to severe retinal hemorrhage.