Monday 31 January 2011

The Umbilical Cord: When do we clamp it?

Clamping the umbilical cord immediately at birth was something that I was taught to do as a routine part of 'delivery' management. The reason for clamping the cord so quickly, I was told, was to stop the baby getting unnecessary blood because the extra blood would be all the more for the baby to process and they would be at risk of becoming jaundiced, caused by the breakdown of all the fetal blood cells.  A nuchal cord (cord around the neck of the baby) was felt for and cut before the shoulders and rest of the baby was born.

Added to the problem of extra blood with an uncut cord, was the fact that the woman was routinely injected with a synthetic form of oxytocin to hasten third stage. The injection of the synthetic oxytocic in third stage made the uterus contract. Authorities believed that if the cord wasn't cut swiftly, the uterine contractions caused by the injection would cause an even greater surge of blood into the new baby, causing the baby to be overloaded with blood and at even more risk of jaundice. 

Once I started working with childbearing women in a one to one way in private practice, the need to clamp and cut the umbilical cord immediately at birth was challenged by the women I worked with. They wanted the cord to be left alone until it stopped pulsating. Some even wanted the placenta to be born before the cord was cut. A few wanted the placenta and cord to be left attached to the baby and allowed to drop off itself, a process called Lotus birth.

The literature was mixed in regards to the advisability of leaving the cord to pulsate or clamping immediately. The opposed camps had reasons such as jaundice, blood volume, postpartum haemorrhage rates to explain their particular views and reasons for their recommendations. The reasons for cutting the cord have been proven to be spurious.  There is however a lot of evidence for leaving the cord alone.  Women and midwives have been talking about and promoting leaving the cord alone as a best practice strategy for several decades now and the evidence for doing so is only getting stronger.  Have a look at the way the cord changes in the minutes after birth.  The evidence for leaving the cord intact is also clear in the case of nuchal cords. Leaving them alone, gently 'somersaulting' the baby to untangle the cord as the baby is born works perfectly and there is no risk of having the baby's oxygen supply prematurely interrupted.  As beautifully explained on the Midwife Thinking blog, the oxygen carrying capacity of an intact cord is the baby's first line of resuscitation after birth. Our medical colleagues have been slower to take up the idea of leaving the cord alone. However a 2011 report has confirmed that iron stores are improved when the cord is left to stop pulsating. A more recent review found that "newborns with later clamping [were heavier and] had higher hemoglobin levels 24 to 48 hours postpartum and were less likely to be iron-deficient three to six months after birth, compared with term babies who had early cord clamping".


A wonderful demonstration of why the umbilical cord should be left alone is provided by Penny Simkin in this video.

Hope for a more balanced approach to the topic of cord clamping or leaving it alone is on the horizon as an obstetric doctor in the US has written about what he calls 'delayed cord clamping' and has produced the following videos for The Grand Rounds on this topic.

Delayed cord clamping Grand Rounds 1

Delayed cord clamping Grand Rounds 2

Delayed cord clamping Grand Rounds 3

Delayed cord clamping Grand Rounds 4 

For more information on the umbilical cord and placenta, go to Rachel Reed's Midwife Thinking blog.  There is a post on the placenta in birth films on this blog here.

Another aspect that hasn't really been explored in great detail as yet, is the perfusion of the newborn's brain at birth. My thinking is that leaving the cord alone allows the newborn's brain to be optimally perfused and ensures that the neuronal connections that proliferate in response to birth to wire in the best possible way, especially when the baby is skin to skin with her/his mother and exposed to the multisensory stimulation that occurs in a physiologically mediated birthing experience. The question to be asked is "do babies suffer subtle brain damage through premature clamping of the cord and less than optimal sensory experiences at birth?" I suspect they do.


Some women want the cord clamped and pulled to get the placenta out as quickly as possible, others see the placenta as the spiritual twin of the baby and want to keep the baby and placenta together.  There are many reasons for leaving the transition to extrauterine life and resuscitation system alone, what's your view?

I can see the day dawning when we look back and say "remember when we used to think that cutting the umbilical cord prematurely was a good thing to do" with incredulous amazement.

Postscript: There is an article (8th October 2014) in the Journal of Midwifery and Women's Health on clamping the umbilical cord at birth. Called "Is it time to Rethink Cord Management when Resuscitation is needed" the article provides compelling evidence for leaving the cord intact and resuscitating a compromised infant by the mother's side.

Post Postscript: A landmark paper published 26th May 2015 has added evidence to my theory of brain & gut damage associated with early cord clamping:

The authors concluded:

Delayed cord clamping (CC) compared with early CC improved scores in the fine-motor and social domains at 4 years of age, especially in boys, indicating that optimising the time to CC may affect neurodevelopment in a low-risk population of children born in a high-income country.

PPS A non peer reviewed article discusses the issues of hypovolaemia in newborns caused by premature cord clamping says this:
Modern human childbirth is “managed” obstetrics, designed to avoid complications and to preserve physiology – a normal, healthy outcome. However, management often intrudes on physiology, producing unintended consequences.
and raises concerns around the potential for multiple organ damage, including brain damage with premature cord clamping.

Now for anyone not yet convinced of the value in leaving the cord to do its magic, this post from AWHONN on a Placental Transfusion for Neonatal Resuscitation after a complete Abruption may help you to change your mind!

Time for practice change everyone!

Monday 10 January 2011

Explaining Tongue Tie

Tongue tie, officially known as Ankyloglossia, is one of those developmental 'glitches' that can cause big and life long problems for the person with it and disrupt their ability to breastfeed. The inability to properly latch onto a mother's breast that comes with the condition of Ankyloglossia can make makes breastfeeding, which should be a source of joy and satisfaction, into a nightmare of pain and suffering for the woman. 

All babies should be checked for tongue tie at birth. Midwives and doctors should ensure the baby's tongue can move freely and fully extend in a thrusting movement. If there is any twisting or 'pull back' into a heartshape of the tongue tip, the baby is most likely tongue tied. This brochure shows you how to check and identify if a baby is tongue tied.

Treatment of 'tongue tie' has gone through different 'fashions'. The last few decades have seen a lack of recognition of this problem and when identified, a real reluctance to treat it. This widespread ignorance has caused many oral and developmental problems for the children and breastfeeding 'failure' for women who rightfully, couldn't bear the pain and trauma to their nipples caused by their babies inability to attach themselves to the breast. Treatment has been the source of a much controversy. Some experts advise taking a 'wait and see' approach and delaying any surgical intervention until the child is older. This 'wait and see' approach is associated with speech and normal mouth development disruptions and lactation failure.

Thankfully, due to the work and care of a few dedicated lactation consultants and paediatric doctors, the condition and ensuing problems are increasingly recognised. In the last few years, appropriate correction of the defect is being instituted with excellent results.

This brochure has been produced by a paediatric dentist and demonstrates the various forms of Ankyglossia (tongue tie) - the photos are excellent. The problems this condition can produce long term are given and treatment options are explained.

If any woman has problems with sore and damaged nipples, ensure your midwife or doctor checks your baby's mouth for tongue tie. The brochure also shows you how to check yourself. Sometimes the tongue tie can be 'occult' that is, not obvious when looking, you have to feel under the tongue against the base of it to identify the tethering.

If the link for the brochure doesn't work, look on Dr Kotlow's website for it

Another resource is the excellent milk matters site and this post on tongue tie as the hidden cause of feeding problems.