The most rare yet most serious risk of
vaginal birth after cesarean (VBAC) is that the scar
on the uterus may break open (rupture) during labor. This is a rare risk
whenever a woman has a scar on her uterus, but it is a little more likely to
happen with a VBAC than a scheduled cesarean.1
- About 5 out of 1,000 women (0.5%) with one low
side-to-side incision scar have a uterine rupture during VBAC when the labor
starts on its own without the use of medicine.
- About 2 out of 1,000
women (0.2%) with one low side-to-side scar who choose a scheduled repeat
cesarean have a uterine rupture.
It is likely that the women who have a rupture have other
risk factors that make them more likely to have this complication.
Having had a vaginal delivery during another pregnancy lowers the risk of
uterine rupture during VBAC. Women who have delivered vaginally and later had a
cesarean delivery have about one-fourth the risk of women who have had a
cesarean delivery but no vaginal delivery.2
A woman's risk of uterine rupture increases with:
- Each additional uterine surgical scar.
- The use of medicine to start (induce) labor. Some doctors avoid the use of any medicine to start a VBAC trial
of labor. Other doctors are comfortable with the careful use of oxytocin to
start labor when the cervix is soft and opening (dilating).
- Any uterine scar tissue that reaches above the lower, thinner part of the uterus. Between 40 and 90 out of 1,000 women with a vertical
incision develop a rupture.2
Sparing use of oxytocin to help (augment) a slow labor has
rarely been linked to uterine rupture.3 Some doctors
also place a thin tube with a small balloon into the cervix. This can soften
the cervix and does not seem to raise the chance of uterine rupture.
In the rare event that a uterine scar ruptures, it can be dangerous to
both the mother and her infant. Depending on severity, a rupture can:
- Cause severe maternal bleeding and a decrease in
oxygen to the baby.
- Often be repaired. If it is not repairable, the
uterus is removed (hysterectomy).
- Cause fetal
brain damage or death.
- Be mild and harmless.