1 / 30

ABDOMINAL PAIN IN PREGNANCY

ABDOMINAL PAIN IN PREGNANCY. District 1 ACOG Medical Student Teaching Module 2011. Challenge of Abdominal Pain During Pregnancy. Multiple causes including essentially all non pregnancy causes plus obstetric causes Clinical presentation & natural history often altered with pregnancy

skyler
Download Presentation

ABDOMINAL PAIN IN PREGNANCY

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. ABDOMINAL PAIN IN PREGNANCY District 1 ACOG Medical Student Teaching Module 2011

  2. Challenge of Abdominal Pain During Pregnancy • Multiple causes including essentially all non pregnancy causes plus obstetric causes • Clinical presentation & natural history often altered with pregnancy • Diagnostic evaluation and treatment plans altered & limited • Fetal wellbeing to be considered

  3. Obstetric/Gynecologic Etiologies • Ruptured Ectopic • Pre-eclampsia/Eclampsia • Placental Abruption • Uterine Rupture • Ovarian Cyst Rupture • PID • Tubo-Ovarian Abscess • Uterine Leiomyomas • Abortion • Salpingitis • Endometriosis • Cancer of Cervix or Ovary

  4. Common Non OB Etiologies • GERD/other bowel c/o • Intestinal Obstruction • Cholelithiasis/Cholecystitis • Pancreatitis • Pyelonephritis • Nephrolithiasis • Appendicitis

  5. HISTORY • As with most things, history essential to diagnosis: -Location -Character -Radiation -Aggravating/Relieving Factors

  6. PHYSICAL EXAM • Uterus displaces abdominal organs • Moving omentum does not wall off infection as well • Late pregnancy abdominal wall laxity may mask rigid abdomen of peritonitis

  7. GERD • Up to 80% in pregnancy • Gastric compression by uterus, hypotonic LES, & gastrointestinal dysmotility • Epigastric discomfort, nausea, emesis, anorexia, regurgitation, water brash • PUD decreases secondary to decreased gastric secretion, decreased motility, & increased mucus secretion

  8. Treatment of GERD • Lifestyle modifications • H2 Blockers (Ranitidine) • PPI’s (Losec) • Consider deferring H Pylori eradication until PP because of possible teratogenic effects of certain medication regimes • Surgery for GERD best delayed until PP • Esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) for bleeding & surgery if unstable as fetus tolerates maternal hypotension poorly • In advanced pregnancy, c/s before gastric surgery for bleeding

  9. Intestinal Obstruction • Second most common nonobstetrical abdominal emergency (>1/1500) • Incidental or secondary to pregnancy • Large increase in #’s results from increased #’s abdominal procedures, PID, & # pregnancies in older women • Most common T3 b/c mechanical effects large uterus, fetal head descent or immediately PP because rapid change uterine size • Adhesions (previous surgery) 60-70% SBO

  10. Intestinal Obstruction cont … • AXR required to dx & monitor despite risk radiation to fetus • Surgery for complete/unremitting • Medical tx for partial/intermittent -IV fluid & lyte correction -NGT to suction -Morbidity/mortality related to delayed dx -Maternal < 6% -Fetal 20-30% -Maternal 13% in colonic volvulus

  11. Cholelithiasis • Pregnancy increases bile lithogenicity & sludge formation b/c estrogen increases cholesterol synthesis and progesterone impairs gallbladder motility • >12% pregnancy compared to 1-2% controls • Pregnancy does not increase severity of complications • Most gallstones are asymptomatic

  12. Cholelithiasis • Symptoms: -Biliary colic in epigastrium/RUQ -May radiate to back, flank, or shoulders -pain often associated with post prandial states (especially fatty foods) -Pain typically lasts 1 to several hours -Diaphoresis, nausea, & emesis common Physical exam often unremarkable apart from occasional RUQ tenderness

  13. Cholelithiasis • 1/3 patients no additional episode X 2 yrs • Complications of cholelithiasis include cholecystitis, choledocholithiasis, jaundice, cholangitis, biliary stricture, sepsis, abscess, empyema, gallbladder perforation, & gallstone pancreatitis

  14. Cholecystitis • Inflammation usually caused by cystic duct obstruction & supersaturated bile • 3rd most common nonobstetric surgical emergency • 1-8/10,000 • Same symptoms but pain more prolonged • Often get tachycardia, fever, R subcostal tenderness, & Murphy’s sign • Leukocytosis common • Serum LFT’s may be slightly abnormal • Jaundice may suggest choledocholithiasis

  15. Tx for Cholecystitis • Cholecystectomy • Pre-op NPO, IV fluid, abx • Abdominal surgery best in T2 • T1 associated with fetal abortion & T3 with premature labor • Cholecystectomy may be deferred in appropriate cases • Lap chole safe in earlier pregnancy • Intraoperative cholangiography only for strong indications • Maternal & fetal mortality < 5%

  16. Choledocholithiasis • Abdominal pressure & jaundice • Endoscopic u/s • Fever/chills, leukocytosis, n&v • ERCP & sphincterotomy with cholecystectomy PP

  17. Pyelonephritis • Renal alterations in 70-90% • More pronounced T2 & T3 when risk pyelonephritis is greatest • Asymptomatic bacteriuria (ASB) in about 7% • Acute cystitis 2% • ASB treated to prevent pyelonephritis (cephalosporins, nitrofurantoin …) • 25-40% untreated ASB develop pyelo • 30% retreatment

  18. Pyelonephritis • Acute pyelo in 1-2% pregnancies • Symptoms & Signs: -Fever/chills -N & V -Flank pain -CVA tenderness -Complications include sepsis, shock, ADRS, Pulmonary edema, renal insufficiency/abscess, & recurrent infection

  19. Pyelonephritis • Tx is IV abx until patient clinically improves and then PO abx • Renal u/s if no improvement after 3 days • Associated with preterm labor and delivery

  20. Nephrolithiasis • Symptomatic < 5/1000 pregnancies but accounts for the most nonobstetric hospitalizations • About 50% causes by hypercalciuria • Usually T2 or T3 • Symptoms & Signs : -Abdominal/flank pain often radiating to groin -Gross hematuria, urgency, frequency -N&V, diaphoresis, fever/chills

  21. Nephrolithiasis • Fluoroscopy relatively contraindicated • U/S initial test of choice • Tx includes hydration, analgesia, & abx if infection – most responds well • Obstruction, sepsis requires ureteral stent • Surgery in refractory cases • Risk premature labor

  22. Acute Pancreatitis • 0.1-1% pregnancies • Most common T3 & PP • Gallstones cause > 70% • EtOH quite uncommon but other causes include drugs, surgery, trauma, etc • Pregnancy does not affect • Epigastric pain most common complaint • Pain may radiate to back, shoulders, or flanks • Nausea, emesis, fever common

  23. Acute Pancreatitis cont … • Signs: -Midabdominal tenderness -Occasional rebound -Guarding -Hypoactive BS -Distension -Tympany

  24. Acute Pancreatitis cont … • Elevated Amylase & Lipase • U/S for cholelithiasis & bile duct dilation • Endoscopic u/s for choledocholithiasis • Pancreatitis in pregnancy usually mild and responds well to medical therapy -NPO -IV fluids -Gastric acid suppression -Analgesia (Meperidine) -? NGT suction

  25. Acute Pancreatitis cont … • Severe pancreatitis with abscess, sepsis, phlegmon requires ICU, Abx, TPN, & possible radiologic/surgical intervention • Pregnancy should not delay CT or surgery in these cases • Endoscopic spincterotomy can be performed during pregnancy with minimal fetal radiation exposure • Maternal mortality low with uncomplicated but > 10% with complicated pancreatitis • T1 – fetal abortion ; T3 – preterm labor

  26. APPENDICITIS • Most common nonobstetric surgical emergency (1/1000) in pregnancy • Appendicitis in 1/1500 (65%) • Slightly more likely during T2 • Maternal mortality (highest in T3) somewhat higher secondary to delayed dx and decline of laparotomy (0.1% without perforation & 4% with perforation)

  27. Appendicitis cont … • Up to 25% develop appendiceal perforation • Fetal complications mostly secondary to preterm labor (1-2% in uncomplicated appendicitis and 30-40% with peritonitis)

  28. Appendicitis cont … Symptoms: -Periumbilical (early visceral obstructive) -RLL/RUQ (late parietal secondary inflammation) – very focal -N & V, anorexia, urinary frequency Signs: -Focal tenderness/guarding /rebound/ ?peritoneal signs (omental displacement)

  29. Appendicitis cont … • Investigations: -Leukocytosis normal in pregnancy -U/S nonspecific but may show appendiceal mural thickening & periappendiceal fluid (mostly to help r/o other etiologies) -CT better but exposes fetus to radiation -Often confused with right pyelonephritis/cholecystitis

  30. Appendicitis Management • APPENDICITIS REQUIRES SURGERY • IV hydration & lytes correction • Abx (Penicillin, Cephalosporins, Clinda, Gent) • Laparoscopy in T1 & ? T2 for nonperforated • Laparotomy incision over pt of focal tenderness • Appendectomy even if no appendicitis • Concomitant c/s not done

More Related