Pelvimetry is the measurement of the dimensions and capacity of the pelvis to determine whether vaginal delivery is possible or if caesarean section may be required.
Overview
Definition: Assessment of pelvic dimensions to predict cephalopelvic disproportion (CPD) and feasibility of vaginal delivery
Clinical Significance: While routine pelvimetry is not recommended in modern obstetrics, understanding pelvic anatomy remains important for:
- Assessing progress of labour
- Managing dystocia
- Planning mode of delivery in specific cases
- Understanding mechanisms of labour
Pelvic Anatomy
Pelvic Types (Caldwell-Moloy Classification)
Gynaecoid Pelvis (50% of women)
- Round inlet
- Wide subpubic arch (>90°)
- Non-prominent ischial spines
- Most favourable for vaginal delivery
Android Pelvis (20% of women)
- Heart-shaped inlet
- Narrow subpubic arch (<90°)
- Prominent ischial spines
- Convergent sidewalls
- Least favourable for vaginal delivery
Anthropoid Pelvis (25% of women)
- Oval inlet (anteroposterior > transverse)
- Narrow subpubic arch
- Non-prominent ischial spines
- Occipitoposterior positions common
Platypelloid Pelvis (5% of women)
- Flat, wide inlet (transverse > anteroposterior)
- Wide subpubic arch
- Rare; transverse arrest common
Key Pelvic Measurements
Pelvic Inlet (Superior Pelvic Aperture)
- Anteroposterior diameter:
- True conjugate (anatomical): 11 cm (from sacral promontory to upper pubic symphysis)
- Obstetric conjugate: 10.5 cm (shortest AP diameter)
- Diagonal conjugate: 12.5 cm (clinically measurable on vaginal examination)
- Transverse diameter: 13 cm (widest distance)
- Oblique diameter: 12 cm
Pelvic Cavity (Mid-pelvis)
- Interspinous diameter: 10.5 cm (distance between ischial spines)
- Narrowest part of pelvis
Pelvic Outlet (Inferior Pelvic Aperture)
- Anteroposterior diameter: 13 cm (from lower pubic symphysis to tip of sacrum)
- Transverse diameter (bi-ischial/intertuberous): 11 cm
- Subpubic angle: >90° (gynaecoid)
Methods of Pelvimetry
Clinical Pelvimetry
Vaginal Examination
- Assess diagonal conjugate (if sacral promontory can be reached, <12 cm suggests contracted pelvis)
- Evaluate ischial spines prominence
- Measure subpubic angle
- Assess sacral curvature and coccyx mobility
- Palpate sidewalls (parallel vs convergent)
Advantages: No radiation, readily available
Limitations: Subjective, examiner-dependent, less accurate
Radiological Pelvimetry
X-ray Pelvimetry
- Anteroposterior and lateral views
- Accurate measurements possible
- Rarely used due to radiation exposure
CT Pelvimetry
- Low-dose protocol available
- Accurate 3D measurements
- Minimal radiation (<0.25 mGy)
MRI Pelvimetry
- No radiation
- Excellent soft tissue visualization
- Expensive, limited availability
Clinical Applications
Indications for Pelvimetry (Limited)
Possible Indications:
- Breech presentation at term (controversial)
- Previous traumatic pelvic fracture
- Severe pelvic deformity (e.g., rickets, osteomalacia)
- Trial of labour after caesarean section (TOLAC) - selected cases
NOT Routinely Indicated:
- Normal pregnancy with cephalic presentation
- Previous caesarean section (routine)
- Suspected macrosomia
- Failure to progress in labour (clinical assessment preferred)
Cephalopelvic Disproportion (CPD)
Definition: Mismatch between fetal head size and maternal pelvis preventing descent and delivery
Causes:
- Pelvic factors: Contracted pelvis, abnormal pelvic shape
- Fetal factors: Macrosomia, large head, malpresentation, malposition
- Combined: Normal pelvis + normal baby but poor fit
Diagnosis:
- Clinical assessment during labour (preferred)
- Failure of descent despite adequate contractions
- Caput and moulding assessment
- Trial of labour often most reliable diagnostic tool
Management:
- Trial of labour in most cases
- Caesarean section if no progress despite adequate contractions
Current Recommendations
Evidence-Based Practice
WHO and ACOG Guidelines:
- Routine pelvimetry NOT recommended
- Does not improve outcomes
- Does not accurately predict CPD
- May lead to unnecessary caesarean sections
- Clinical assessment during labour is more reliable
Trial of Labour:
- Best assessment of fetopelvic relationship
- Allows for dynamic assessment
- Most women with suspected CPD can deliver vaginally
When to Consider Imaging
Breech Presentation:
- Some centres use CT/MRI pelvimetry
- Evidence limited
- Clinical judgment remains important
Pelvic Trauma/Deformity:
- Imaging may be helpful
- Surgical consultation may be needed
Key Points
- Routine pelvimetry is not recommended in modern obstetrics
- Clinical pelvimetry during labour provides dynamic assessment
- Most CPD cannot be predicted before labour
- Trial of labour is the best test of fetopelvic relationship
- Imaging pelvimetry has limited specific indications
- Understanding pelvic anatomy remains important for managing labour