Had an appointment today babies head is engaged and head down... but he is a transverse lie.... Looked this up online and it says that usually babies who are in this position are born via C section? I really dont want a C section.. but If i have no choice I have no choice right? Does anyone know more about this?
TTC since July 09
BFP October 10, 09
baby girl was due June 26 2010...
D&C due to Anacephaly Dec 15 2009
TTC since January 2010
BFP July 7 2010 Due March 17 2011
Delivered Healthy Baby Boy via C-Section Feb 25 2011
BFP June 19 2012 Due FEB 25 2013

Re: Head Down Transverse Lie?
I'm lurking from PAL, but my little guy was a head-up unstable lay (he flipped from head-down to breech to transverse/head-up every few days - I didn't know this until almost 36 weeks and had weekly u/s after finding out).
So for you, LO is transverse, but their belly is pointed at the floor. For me, he was transverse with his belly pointed at the ceiling. If LO is head down and transverse, a version is more likely to be successful and LO has a better chance of turning on their own. If the dr does a version, you need to deliver soon afterwards - the baby "likes" the transverse position and will try to flip back again.
At 38 weeks my LO transverse, at 38w3d he was breech, at 39w he was transverse again and at 39w2 days when I was sent over to the hospital to have my c-section (due to a poor NST) I requested one last u/s and he was head-down. I had a smooth, easy vaginal delivery with no complications at all.
Dup
The baby doesn't have to be sideways to be transeverse There is also LOT where baby is head down like your doctor said but not facing forward or toward your spine, he is facing sideways. You should get on spinning babies it is VERY helpful!
I think you might be confusing occiput transverse position with transverse lie position. Occiput transverse (OT) is when the baby is head down but facing to either your left or right side. Transverse lie is when the baby's entire body is horizontal in the womb. If your baby is head down and engaged in your pelvis, they can't be transverse lie but they can by OT.
Transverse lie babies cannot be born vaginally in that position--they either need to turn on their own, be manually turned or be born by cesarean. OT position is less concerning and OT babies will usually turn to occiput anterior (OA) on their own during labor.
HTH!