Fetal heart monitoring with a high heart rate requires oxygen.
In general, during the 20-minute fetal heart rate monitoring time, the fetal heart rate is 110-160 beats per minute, the baseline fetal heart rate is stable, and there is a normal acceleration of the fetal heart after fetal movement, which indicates that the fetal heart rate is normal, and there is no symptom of intrauterine hypoxia.
High fetal heart rate on fetal heart monitoring is mostly caused by fetal hypoxia in the uterus. The therapeutic treatment of oxygen inhalation can improve the blood and oxygen supply of the fetus, alleviate the symptoms of fetal hypoxia, and promote fetal activity.
In addition, umbilical cord bypass may also cause hypoxia, resulting in increased fetal heart rate, which can be checked by pregnant women through ultrasound.
Pregnant women should pay attention to rest in their daily life, exercise appropriately, eat more nutritious food, take regular pregnancy checkups, and pay attention to the number of fetal movements in order to prevent adverse consequences.