1 / 43

Early Pregnancy Problems

Learn about bleeding in early pregnancy and the different types of miscarriages. Understand the causes, symptoms, diagnosis, and management options for these issues.

occhipinti
Download Presentation

Early Pregnancy Problems

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Early Pregnancy Problems

  2. Introduction • Bleeding in early pregnancy and miscarriage • Ectopic Pregnancy • Gestational Trophoblastic Disease • Hyperemesis Gravidarum

  3. Bleeding in Early Pregnancy & Miscarriage

  4. Definitions • Remember – MISCARRIAGE not ABORTION • Threatened miscarriage Vaginal bleeding at < 20 weeks gestation (cervix closed) • Inevitable miscarriage Bleeding, pregnancy still in uterus (cervix open) • Incomplete miscarriage Retained products of conception in uterus (cervix open) • Complete miscarriage Uterus empty (cervix closed) • Delayed miscarriage Gestational sac with/without fetus present (but no FH), cervix closed

  5. Miscarriage • Approximately 30% of pregnant women will experience bleeding in early pregnancy • At least 50% of women with threatened miscarriage will have continuing pregnancy • Miscarriage occurs in 15-20% of clinically diagnosed pregnancies

  6. Causes of miscarriage • Genetic abnormalities • Progesterone deficiency? • Maternal illness e.g. diabetes • Uterine abnormalities • ‘Cervical incompetence’

  7. History • LMP • Bleeding: amount (spotting/gush), clots • Pain: type – crampy/sharp/dull location: lower abdomen, shoulder tip, back pain • Passed products?

  8. Examination • ABC (vital signs) stable or cervical shock • Abdominal tender/ rebound tenderness • Vaginal (speculum) • Cervix: open/closed • Amount of bleeding • Products visible? .............TAKE IT OUT!

  9. Speculums Cusco speculum Sims speculum

  10. Investigations • Ideally in dedicated ‘Early Pregnancy Assessment Unit’ • Ultrasound • Measurement of serum βhCG • Determination of blood & Rhesus group • admit if significant bleeding • Psychological support

  11. Ultrasound • Expect to see viable fetus from around 6.5 weeks transabdominally, 5.5 weeks transvaginally • Other possible appearances • Incomplete miscarriage • Empty uterus Not pregnant Too early gestation Extrauterine pregnancy Complete miscarriage • Empty sac Non-viable pregnancy Too early gestation • Fetal pole with no FH If tiny, may be very early gestation Delayed miscarriage

  12. Gestational sac

  13. Very early..

  14. Normal 8-9 wk pregnancy

  15. Empty sac

  16. Measurement of βhCG • Not necessary if diagnosis unequivocal on scan • Useful as part of investigations to diagnose/exclude extrauterine pregnancy/miscarriage • Doubling time approx 2 days in viable pregnancy • Halving time 1-2 days in complete miscarriage • Should see fetal pole with βhCG of 1500-2000

  17. Management of Incomplete Miscarriage • Conservative Risk of bleeding, infection, retained POC, unpredictable • Medical (Prostaglandin e.g. Misoprostol) Risk of bleeding, retained POC, need for D&C • Surgical [Evacuation of retained products of conception (ERPC)] Suction curettage usually under GA, risk of bleeding, infection, perforation of uterus, longer term complications (e.g. Ashermans syndrome)

  18. Ectopic Pregnancy

  19. Definition • Pregnancy occurring outside uterine cavity • Approx 0.5-1% of pregnancies – rate increasing • Maternal mortality in 1/2500 ectopic pregnancies (13 deaths 1997-1999 in UK)

  20. Site • Fallopian tube • Ovary • Abdominal cavity • Cervix

  21. Risk factors • Previous PID • Previous ectopic pregnancy • Previous tubal surgery (e.g. sterilisation, reversal) • Pregnancy in the presence of IUD

  22. Symptoms • Acute • Low abdominal pain – peritoneal irritation by blood • Vaginal bleeding – shedding of decidua • Shoulder tip pain – referred from diaphragm • Fainting - hypovolaemia • Chronic (Atypical) • Asymptomatic, gastrointestinal symptoms, back pain

  23. Signs • Shock – tachycardia, hypotension, pallor • Abdominal tenderness • Adnexal tenderness • Adnexal mass • None

  24. Diagnosis • Ultrasound • Empty uterus, adnexal mass, free fluid in Abdomen, rarely live pregnancy outside of uterus • Serum βhCG • Suboptimal rise, plateau • Laparoscopy

  25. Ultrasound

  26. Left Ectopic on laparoscopy

  27. Management • Medical • Methotrexate • Surgical • Laparoscopic salpingectomy / salpingotomy • Laparotomy • ‘Conservative’ • Self resolving with close watch

  28. Gestational Trophoblastic Disease

  29. Hydatidiform Mole • 1 in 1000 pregnancies • Partial • Associated with fetus, triploid • Complete • No fetal pole, diploid chromosomes paternally derived

  30. Presentation • Asymptomatic – incidental finding at dating or anomaly USS • Vaginal bleeding • Hyperemesis gravidarum • Uterus large for dates

  31. Diagnosis • Ultrasound (Snow storm appearance) • Histology after surgical evacuation

  32. Snowstorm appearance

  33. Hydatidiform Mole after hysterectomy

  34. Follow-up • Monitor via regional centre • 3% risk choriocarcinoma following complete mole, less following partial mole • Choriocarcinoma may follow any subsequent pregnancy – miscarriage, TOP, term delivery • Choriocarcinoma is curable • Monitor βhCG levels to check resolution – for 6 months to 2 years • Avoid pregnancy for minimum 6 months or until all clear

  35. Hyperemesis Gravidarum

  36. Hyperemesis Gravidarum • Nausea/vomiting in pregnancy is normal – ‘morning sickness’ • Rarely excessive – hyperemesis gravidarum • Related to level of βhCG

  37. Associated Factors • UTI • Multiple pregnancy • Molar pregnancy • Socio-economic factors

  38. Investigations • Renal function • Liver function • CBC • Urinalysis • Ultrasound

  39. Consequences & Management • Dehydration • Electrolyte imbalance Metabolic alkalosis, hypokalaemia, hypernatremia • Oesophageal tears (Mallory Weiss) • Thrombosis DVT/PE/Cerebral sinus • Weight loss • Vitamin deficiency (vit B1- thiamine) Wernicke's encephalopathy • Psychological impact • IV fluids • Electrolyte replacement • Antiemetics • Thromboprophylaxis • Dietary advice • Vitamin supplementation • Steroids • Antibiotics if UTI • Termination of pregnancy

  40. in CONCLUSION GYNAECOLOGICAL EMERGENCIES 1. MISCARRIAGE 2. ECTOPIC 3. PELVIC SEPSIS 4. OVARIAN TORSION

  41. Thank you for your attention

More Related