@article{Kalpana Mahadik_Archana Tyagi_Akanksha Yadav_Razia Sultana_Roopam Jain_2021, title={Assessing Success Of Vaginal Birth After Cesarean By FLAMM Model In A Retrospective Observational Design: Assessing Success Of Vaginal Birth After Cesarean By FLAMM Model}, volume={12}, url={http://nicpd.ac.in/ojs-/index.php/njirm/article/view/3071}, abstractNote={<p>Background: After year 2000 cesarean rates have increased from 15% to 30-50% worldwide. Practice of Trial of labor after cesarean has decreased from last two decades of 20th century. Predictors of vaginal birth after cesarean are not uniform and not suitable equally for all populations. FLAMM model was tested in this study for its predictability for a successful vaginal birth after previous one cesarean. Material And Methods: For an observational, retrospective study 72 patient files admitted in 2018 in Obstetric Department of C R Gardi Hospital were included which fulfilled criteria of having second pregnancy after cesarean for non recurrent indications like fatal distress, failure of induction of labor, pre-eclampsia, eclampsia, twins and others. Indication of contracted pelvis, rupture uterus, previous classical cesarean section; and multiple pregnancy, medical complications and obstetric complications in this pregnancy were excluded. FLAMM score parameters; cervical dilatation, effacement, presence of previous vaginal birth before cesarean, indication of it and age of woman were used. Observations of successful and failed trial were done by scoring system. Chi square test was used to compare data. Study variables were success of trial in various FLAMM parameters. Result: Higher scores in cervical dilatation (p<0.001), effacement (p<0.001) and prior vaginal delivery (p=0.03) were significantly associated with a successful outcome. Higher the aggregate FLAMM score, higher were chances of successful trial. A non-recurrent indication other than non-progress of labor for previous cesarean had no statistical association with success of trial. Aggregate score of 6 and more has 100 % predictability for a successful vaginal birth.Conclusion: Prediction by FLAMM model resulted in 62.5% successful trial. FLAMM model may be used for near to accurate prediction of successful trial of labor after cesarean. [Mahadik K A Natl J Integr Res Med, 2021; 12(3):7-14]</p>}, number={3}, journal={National Journal of Integrated Research in Medicine}, author={Kalpana Mahadik and Archana Tyagi and Akanksha Yadav and Razia Sultana and Roopam Jain}, year={2021}, month={Jul.}, pages={07–14} }