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https://scmp.com/lifestyle/health-wellness/article/2170403/womens-birth-canals-vary-size-and-shape-world-over-medical
Lifestyle/ Health & Wellness

Women’s birth canals vary in size and shape the world over, but medical training is based on Europeans

  • The pelvic canals of women from Sub-Saharan Africa differ from Asians, Northern Europeans and Native Americans in width and depth
  • Basing all treatment on one ethnicity can be harmful
Not all birth canals are identical, but medical science treats them that way. Photo: Shutterstock

The size and shape of women’s birth canals vary depending on what part of the world they live in but most medical textbooks are based on a European body type, scientists say, warning of health risks.

Differences in the depth and width of the pelvic canal determine a newborn’s route into the world, and forcing births to conform to a single standard can be harmful to mother and child, they report in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B.

“An obstetrician’s training is based on a model of the pelvis that has been developed from European women,” says lead author Lia Betti, a senior lecturer in evolutionary anthropology at the University of Roehampton in London.

“But the typical pelvic shape and typical childbirth pattern can differ among populations,” she said.

Study lead author Lia Betti is a senior lecturer in evolutionary anthropology at the University of Roehampton in London. Photo: Twitter/@liabetti
Study lead author Lia Betti is a senior lecturer in evolutionary anthropology at the University of Roehampton in London. Photo: Twitter/@liabetti

“An update seems necessary, especially in a multiethnic society.”

Women from Sub-Saharan Africa, for example, tend to have a deeper canal, while – at the other extreme – native American women generally have a wider one, she explains. European and Asian women fall somewhere in between.

Two skeletal pelvises measured during the study showing a more oval and wider pelvic canal (a) found to be more common in Europe and the Americas, while birth canals that are more circular and deeper back-to-front (b) are found more frequently in Africa and Asia. Photo: AFP/University of Roehampton
Two skeletal pelvises measured during the study showing a more oval and wider pelvic canal (a) found to be more common in Europe and the Americas, while birth canals that are more circular and deeper back-to-front (b) are found more frequently in Africa and Asia. Photo: AFP/University of Roehampton
This matters because, during birth, a baby rotates while travelling through the canal, aligning the sides of the head and shoulders to the channel’s contours.

“If a woman’s birth canal is substantially different from the model described in textbooks, the movement of the baby will also deviate from the expected pattern,” Betti says.

She cites examples from the early-to-mid 20th century of “horrendous consequences” when forceps were used to rotate babies during delivery, based on erroneous assumptions about the shape of the pelvis.

Forceps have often been used to rotate babies during delivery based on wrong assumptions about the mother’s birth canal. This has led to “horrendous consequences”. Photo: Shutterstock
Forceps have often been used to rotate babies during delivery based on wrong assumptions about the mother’s birth canal. This has led to “horrendous consequences”. Photo: Shutterstock

X-raying pregnant women – standard practice well into the 1950s to determine the position of babies – helped provide the database highlighting differences in female anatomy.

Some 300,000 women die during or shortly after childbirth each year, many due to “complications from delivery,” according to the World Health Organisation.

One of those “complications” is the fact that humans have a big brain encased in bone.

“Owing to the tight fit, the fetus needs to perform a series of rotations to successfully navigate the mother’s birth canal,” Betti explains.

Women from Sub-Saharan Africa have the most diversity in canal size and shape. Photo: Alamy
Women from Sub-Saharan Africa have the most diversity in canal size and shape. Photo: Alamy

The shape of the female pelvis has also been described as an evolutionary compromise between a short, compact body suited for walking on two limbs, and a spacious pelvic canal for big-brained newborns.

This is clear evidence that birth canal variation has been shaped by past population history. Distance from Africa explains a remarkable 43.5 per cent of canal diversity within human populations Lia Betti, study author

But none of this tells us why women in Namibia, Nanjing, and Norway have different internal architectures for giving birth.

There are three possible explanations, none of them mutually exclusive, the authors say.

One is cold weather environments, which may have led to the emergence of wider hips – and, at the same time, a larger inlet to the birth canal – to reduce heat loss by increasing body mass for insulation.

Some studies have suggested that natural selection may have helped to winnow out body types poorly suited to delivery.

The evidence for both of these theories, however, is patchy at best.

The most likely cause of variation, says Betti, has more to do with human migration.

Homo sapiens originated in Africa and dispersed rapidly into new continents 60,000 to 100,000 years ago.

Northern European women’s birth canals are a different size and shape to Native American or sub-Saharan African women. Photo: Alamy
Northern European women’s birth canals are a different size and shape to Native American or sub-Saharan African women. Photo: Alamy

Each founding population was small, forming what is known as a genetic bottleneck.

The further from Africa, the less genetic diversity the migrant groups had. That means that whichever traits they shared – blond hair and fair skin in Scandinavia, for example – would dominate locally.

Likewise for pelvic shapes and contours, which remain far more diverse in Sub-Saharan Africa than elsewhere.

“This is clear evidence that birth canal variation has been shaped by past population history,” Betti says.

“Distance from Africa explains a remarkable 43.5 per cent of canal diversity within human populations.”