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Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Healthy Pregnancy, Baby & Child / What You Need to Know for a Successful VBAC

What You Need to Know for a Successful VBAC

by Sarah Pope / Affiliate Links ✔

Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • Successful VBAC and Uterine Sutures+−
    • Double Layer Suture
    • Single Layer Suture
  • Which Type of Uterine Suture is Best for a future VBAC?
  • VBAC Conclusions

VBACWant to have a successful VBAC (Vaginal Birth After Cesarean) if you must have a C-section the first time around? Read on!

When it comes to giving birth, a vaginal birth is certainly preferable to a C-section. Recovery from vaginal birth is much more rapid and involves less danger to the life of the Mother and child. After all, a C-section is considered major abdominal surgery with all the inherent risks.

In addition, there is evidence that children born vaginally are healthier than those born by C-section. Vaginal birth allows the child’s sterile gut to have first exposure to beneficial flora from the Mother during delivery. This exposure helps to properly seed the intestinal tract with immune system boosting bacteria.

Birth by C-section initially seeds the child’s gut with whatever bacteria are floating around the hospital environment. This leads to a higher risk for development of  auto-immune problems. These chronic issues include allergies, leukemia, type 1 diabetes, asthma and others.

Intravenous (IV) antibiotics during labor can also negatively affect the normal seeding of baby’s gut during vaginal birth. As a result, skipping the Strep B test is a good idea since women who test positive are frequently forced to have IV antibiotics. Unfortunately, this happens even though research has failed to demonstrate any benefit to antibiotic treatment during labor.

Another benefit of vaginal birth is that it involves a gradual and more tolerable increase in stress for the baby. This as opposed to a cold cut Cesarean which shocks and stresses the newborn in a very short period of time. The shock stress of a C-section potentially causes unfavorable DNA changes to the baby’s white blood cells (July 2009 Acta Pediatrica).

For these reasons, it is best to take steps to avoid C-section if at all possible. Having a natural birth at home or at a birth center and avoiding an epidural is one way to reduce C-section risk. Another is to know how to induce labor naturally if baby is late.

In addition, planning for future pregnancies to be VBAC is wise too. Planning for a natural birth with a midwife in attendance with avoidance of all drugs definitely helps skew the odds in Mom’s favor. One intervention typically leads to another, and then another. A domino effect to C-section is thus avoided by refusing all interventions unless deemed a medical emergency.

Sometimes, despite everyone’s best efforts, a C-section needs to be performed.  In these situations, C-sections are indeed a life saving operation.

The fact is that life is unpredictable and a C-section is the end possibility for every pregnant woman. This is true no matter how much planning is done to prevent one!  As a result, every pregnant woman needs to have a conversation with her OB about the approach to stitching up the uterus in the event an emergency C-section is necessary.

Successful VBAC and Uterine Sutures

Many parents do not realize that the doctor performing the C-section has a choice about how to stitch up the uterus following surgical birth.

Double Layer Suture

The double layer uterine closure was primarily used throughout the United States prior to the early 1990’s.  The first layer of sutures pulls all the cut edges of tissue together. The second suture layer, called the “imbricating pattern”, pulls uncut tissue together on top of the first suture layer.

Single Layer Suture

The single layer uterine closure has been used since the early 1990’s in the United States.  Europe also uses this technique extensively.  It involves suturing the cut edges together. Then, smaller sutures are used to stop any continued bleeding or to pull together areas of tissue that aren’t well counterbalanced.

Which Type of Uterine Suture is Best for a future VBAC?

Overwhelming evidence has shown that the single layer closure involves fewer complications in the immediate post operative period.

Research has also indicated that the double layer closure involves less risk of uterine rupture and successful VBAC with future pregnancy.

In other words, each suture method has benefit as well as a downside.

In 2002, a large study was published comparing single to double layer Cesarean sutures. A significantly higher risk of uterine rupture with the single versus the double closure (3.1% vs. .5%) was identified. The study analyzed 489 women who had C-sections with the single closure and 1491 women with the double closure. Results were controlled for use of pitocin, epidurals, age, and other factors.

The study authors concluded that the single closure method involves significantly higher risk of uterine rupture if the woman attempts a VBAC with a later pregnancy.

Since this study, prominent midwives in the US community have advocated use of the double layer closure to improve the odds of women attempting VBACs.  Some even believe that women who have had a single layer closure should not be allowed to plan out of hospital births or VBACS at all.

I heard a prominent US midwife interviewed on National Public Radio advocating the double layer closure. Her reason? This type of suture is a very good idea for women who desire a successful VBAC with future pregnancy.

Smaller studies have shown no difference in risk of uterine rupture between the two suture methods. But, the overwhelming results of the large study by Bujold remains a concern for many in the midwifery community. Hence the continued push for use of the double layer technique.

VBAC Conclusions

If a Mom is only going to have one child or her current pregnancy is her last, then the single layer closure is probably the best choice. This type of suture in the event of a Cesarean gives the best chances for optimal post operative recovery.

However, if Mom wants more children and wants to birth them vaginally, insisting on the double uterine closure in the event a C-section is best. This type of suture greatly improves her odds for a successful VBAC in the future. In fact, some OBs and midwives won’t even attempt a VBAC without it.

Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist

Source:  The Suture Debate

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Category: Healthy Pregnancy, Baby & Child
Sarah Pope

Sarah Pope MGA has been a Health and Nutrition Educator since 2002. She is a summa cum laude graduate in Economics from Furman University and holds a Master’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

She is the author of three books: Amazon #1 bestseller Get Your Fats Straight, Traditional Remedies for Modern Families, and Living Green in an Artificial World.

Her four eBooks Good Diet…Bad Diet, Real Food Fermentation, Ketonomics, and Ancestrally Inspired Dairy-Free Recipes are available for complimentary download via Healthy Home Plus.

Her mission is dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. She is a sought after lecturer around the world for conferences, summits, and podcasts.

Sarah was awarded Activist of the Year in 2010 at the International Wise Traditions Conference, subsequently serving on the Board of Directors of the nutrition nonprofit the Weston A. Price Foundation for seven years.

Her work has been covered by numerous independent and major media including USA Today, ABC, and NBC among many others.

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