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My pelvic bones were also to narrow for my son to fit through. Usually this problem corrects itself as your baby situates itself in the right position- but sometimes it doesn't and your doctor may choose to deliver cesarian. If the bones do not spread it is possible for the baby to get stuck and the doctor may have to use desperate measures (if the vaccuum and tongs don't work) and it may dislocate your baby's shoulder(s). I decided to try anyway, but because my bones were not right my son wouldn't even DROP at all and I did not dialate after 24hrs of labor induction. I had to have a c-section. If you are not comfortable with your doctors opinion, get a second one. If they tell you a c-section is best- do what they tell you.

2007-07-03 07:04:41 · answer #1 · answered by starlightstarbright 3 · 0 0

Based on what? The only way to REALLY tell if your pelvic structure is too small is to have a Cat scan. Did you have that done? If dr. is just using an ultrasound, then ask what the margin of error is on that and insist on a second opinion.

2007-07-03 13:51:20 · answer #2 · answered by sparki777 7 · 0 0

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