Objective To study the activity of the human uterine cervix at the onset of
labour and further characterise cervical asynchronous electromyographic (E
MG) activity in the latent phase.
Design Prospective observational study.
Setting Clinical hospital in Ljubljana.
Participants Forty-seven healthy nulliparous women with relatively unripe c
ervices requiring induction of labour.
Methods Simultaneous registration of a cervical EMG and of the intrauterine
pressure at the very early stage of labour; subsequent EMG signal processi
ng to determine its time, amplitude and frequency parameters.
Main outcome measures Simultaneous comparison of the cervical EMG and the m
echanical activity of the uterine corpus to deduce electrical properties of
the cervical smooth muscle tissue and its activity.
Results EMG bursts, asynchronous with the contractions of the uterine corpu
s, were registered in 20 out of 47 women. In 14 women bursts appeared indep
endent of uterine corpus contractions and in six they followed the peak of
contractions. The bursts had low average median frequency (0.3 Hz), In seve
n women bursts were superimposed onto a background EMG (median frequency =
1.2 Hz).
Conclusions Bursts in the cervical EMG may appear asynchronously with the u
terine contractions. Bursts not related to contractions suggest active and
independent cervical muscle activity. The bursts which follow contractions
may be an active response of the cervical musculature to passive stretching
during a contraction. The EMG frequency content suggests two different con
traction mechanisms or a different origin of the EMG in the cervix.