For more than 20 years, it has been standard practise for doctors to
use a low, side-to-side (transverse) incision across the uterus for a
cesarean delivery. However, a vertical type of
incision is sometimes necessary, such as for some emergency cesarean
deliveries.
Before deciding whether you are a good candidate for a safe
vaginal birth after cesarean (VBAC), you and your
health professional must first confirm what kind of uterine incision you have
had. Because the outward scar is not always positioned over the uterine scar,
checking your medical record is the only dependable way to be sure of your
incision type.
A low transverse (horizontal) incision:
- Cuts across the lower, thinner part of the
uterus. These muscles don't contract as strongly as the upper uterus during
labour.
- Is unlikely to rupture during a subsequent labour and
delivery.
- Has been increasingly used for cesarean deliveries since
the 1970s and is the usual practise among obstetricians.
A vertical (classical) incision:
- Cuts up and down through the uterine muscles that
strongly contract during labour.
- Is more likely to break open
(rupture) during a subsequent labour, particularly if the incision is high
rather than low in the uterus. This risk applies to all uterine scars that are
not low transverse.
- Is very rarely used for cesarean
deliveries.
Uterine rupture rates
Women who have a low transverse cesarean
scar have a lower risk of rupturing than women who have a vertical incision.
About 5 out of every 1,000 women (0.5%) with one low transverse incision scar
have a uterine rupture during labour when the labour starts on its own without
medicine.1 (It is likely that the women who rupture
have other risk factors that make them more vulnerable to this complication.)
Women who have a low vertical cesarean scar
(which is only on the lower uterus) are as likely to deliver vaginally as they
would be with a low transverse scar. And they have no higher risk of
complications, including rupture.2 Some health
professionals are willing to allow a woman with a very low vertical incision to
try VBAC, while most are not. This is because of the concern about uterine
rupture, which has only recently been refuted.
A woman with a vertical (classical) incision
has the greatest uterine rupture risk. Between 4% and 9% (40 to 90 per 1,000)
of women with a vertical incision develop a rupture.2