Monitoring fetal electroencephalogram intrapartum: a systematic literature review
Aude Castel, Yael Frank, John Feltner, Floyd Karp, Catherine Albright,, Martin G. Frasch

TL;DR
This systematic review evaluates the potential of fetal EEG monitoring during labor as a direct biomarker for fetal brain health, highlighting its historical development, current evidence, and future research needs.
Contribution
It synthesizes existing studies on intrapartum fetal EEG, providing insights and recommendations to advance its clinical application during labor.
Findings
fEEG shows potential as a fetal brain health biomarker
clinical studies suggest feasibility but require further validation
identified study designs may facilitate bedside implementation
Abstract
Background: Studies about the feasibility of monitoring fetal electroencephalogram (fEEG) during labor began in the early 1940s. By the 1970s, clear diagnostic and prognostic benefits from intrapartum fEEG monitoring were reported, but until today, this monitoring technology has remained a curiosity. Objectives: Our goal was to review the studies reporting the use of fEEG including the insights from interpreting fEEG patterns in response to uterine contractions during labor. We also used the most relevant information gathered from clinical studies to provide recommendations for enrollment in the unique environment of a labor and delivery unit. Data sources: PubMed. Eligibility criteria: The search strategy was: ("fetus"[MeSH Terms] OR "fetus"[All Fields] OR "fetal"[All Fields]) AND ("electroencephalography"[MeSH Terms] OR "electroencephalography"[All Fields] OR "eeg"[All Fields])…
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