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With an improved method for fitting baselines to human fetal heart-rate traces, the patterns of episodic variations, accelerations and decelerations were similar in 215 64-min records from normal pregnancies and in 95 with mild hypertension and normal outcome. The change in signal loss with gestational age, by Doppler ultrasound for recording heart rate, was entirely due to the greater loss in episodes of high heart-rate variation. The changes in the numbers and sizes of accelerations and decelerations with gestational age were described. There were many records which had only one or no acceleration at 28-33 weeks gestation (16.2%) or 34-41 weeks (7.3%). However, only two (0.7%) had episodes of high heart-rate variation lasting less than 10 min from 28 weeks onwards. The presence of these episodes, with clusters of fetal movements, is therefore likely to be a better numerical index of normality.
Dawes et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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