Obstetrics

Shoulder Dystocia

The Delivery Emergency

Obstetric Emergencies

Shoulder dystocia occurs when the anterior shoulder is impacted behind the pubic symphysis after head delivery. It is unpredictable, unpreventable, and requires rapid, skilled intervention.

Incidence & Pathophysiology

0.2–3% of vaginal deliveries. Shoulders too wide for pelvic outlet.

Risk Factors

~50% occur without risks — be prepared always.

Maternal

  • Obesity
  • Diabetes
  • Short stature

Fetal/Labour

  • Macrosomia
  • Instrumental delivery
  • Prolonged 2nd stage

Diagnosis: Turtle Sign

  • Head retracts against perineum
  • No restitution
  • No descent with traction
Call for help immediately

Management: Stepwise Maneuvers

Call help, stop pushing, no head traction

  1. McRoberts: Thighs to abdomen
  2. Suprapubic pressure: Downward, lateral
  3. Rubin: Push anterior shoulder to chest
  4. Woods: Rotate posterior shoulder 180°
  5. Posterior arm delivery
  6. All fours (Gaskin)
  7. Last resort: Zavanelli, symphysiotomy
Never: Fundal pressure, excessive head traction

Complications

Fetus

  • Erb’s palsy
  • Fractures
  • Hypoxia

Mother

  • PPH
  • Tears
  • Rupture

Prevention

  • Manage macrosomia/diabetes
  • Cesarean if EFW >4.5 kg (diabetic)
  • Skilled birth attendants

Key Takeaways

  • Turtle sign = diagnostic
  • McRoberts + suprapubic = first, most effective
  • No head traction
  • Systematic maneuvers
  • Document time and actions

Conclusion

Shoulder dystocia is a rare but high-stakes emergency. Preparedness and practiced maneuvers save outcomes.

Shoulder dystocia is not preventable — but it is manageable with skill and speed.