$Unique_ID{BRK00320} $Pretitle{} $Title{The Apgar Score and What it Means} $Subject{Apgar newborn evaluation Pregnancy Childbirth Score evaluate baby's color baby oxygenation to tissues heart rate respiration breathing reflex muscle tone scores Babies} $Volume{K-0} $Log{ Apgar Scoring System*003201.tid} Copyright (c) 1991-92,1993 Tribune Media Services, Inc. The Apgar Score and What it Means ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ QUESTION: My wife recently gave birth to an adorable baby girl, our first. During one of my visits to the hospital, our physician and all the hospital doctors came to visit my wife, and I was asked to wait in the corridor. When they came out they started to talk about my baby's score, something to do about breathing. I couldn't understand what they were saying, but it seemed important, and I have continued to wonder what they were talking about. Can you help me? ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ANSWER: It is amazing what you can hear in a hospital corridor, particularly when residents (physicians in training) get excited about a case and fail to withdraw to a more private area before discussing their findings. It is evident that all went well with your child, and that the conversation was more for teaching purposes than actual care, but they were evaluating the Apgar Score that is given to each new born at 1 minute and 5 minutes after birth. It is named after Dr. Virginia Apgar, an American anesthesiologist who designed it to evaluate a baby's status after birth and determine the need for resuscitation, and to aid in the prediction of future brain function based upon its condition at the time of delivery. Five factors are evaluated, and each is given a score from 0 to 2, making 10 the perfect score. They are the baby's color (as a sign of good oxygenation to the tissues); the heart rate, the rate of respiration (or breathing); the presence of a reflex when a tube is placed in the nostril; and the muscle tone based on how the baby moves its arms and legs. Babies rarely get a score of 10, but when low scores change rapidly to higher ones after a few minutes, the outlook is good. Any newborn with a score of 7 or below continues to be checked every 5 minutes to provide a basis for determining the actions and care necessary to correct any problems. Of course, now there are many other tests which can be used by the physician to help assure that prompt and effective treatment will be used to carry the infant past the initial difficult moments of life, and permit proud Moms and Dads to display their personal miracle to all the world. ---------------- The material contained here is "FOR INFORMATION ONLY" and should not replace the counsel and advice of your personal physician. Promptly consulting your doctor is the best path to a quick and successful resolution of any medical problem.