Obstetrics Flashcards

1
Q

What are some other serious infxs in pregnancy?

A

HIV, CMV( cytomegalovirus), hep B, herpes simplex, listeriosis, rubella, parovirus B19, toxoplasmosis.

CMV: commonest viral infx, assc w/ congenital synromes in fetus.
Hx- asymptomatic, fever, malaise, fatigue
Assc: immunosupression, higjer socioeconomic class. Less likely to have childhood immunity.
-DNA virus (herpes family) - can be dormant & reactivated.
Inv- bloods- CMV IgM (current) IgG (immunity)
USS- fetal anomaly scan,
Others: amniocentisis for CMV PCR(polymesrase chain rct)
Manag: no tx to prevent transmission- offer termination if evidence of CNS damage.
Compl: ⬆️ risk of miscarriage and stillbirth, congenital- microcephaly, blindness, skin rash, hepatoslpenomegaly, pneumonitis, mental retardation.
prognosis- 90% babes who are symptomatic- later neuro- developmental sx.

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2
Q

Hep B - what happens?

A

Hx: fever, myalgia, nausea, vomiting, jaundice, abdo pain (70% asympt)
O/E- jaundice, hepatomegaly, RUQ tenderness.
Patho: double stranded DNA v- hepatic dysfuntion.
Bloods: HBsAg (infx), core antibody: anti-HBc IgM- acute infx)
Hep B e-markers( HBeAg- high infectivity) , LFTs.
Manag:
Deliver:C/S NOT indicated.
Postnatal: mothers can feed.
Neonate vaccine if mother HBsAg +ve- at birth, 1M & 2 M.
Neonate HBIG: within 48hrs delivery if acute infx in pregnancy, if

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3
Q

What happens in other infx?

A

HIV- routine HIV test at ANC booking (10weeks), regular viral load + CD4 count. Monitor for drug toxicity: FBC, U&Es, LFTs, lactate and blood glucose.
M: HAART- 3 antiretrovirals combined, reduce trasmission from28% to 2%.
Compl: SE of haart- pre-eclampsia, obstretric cholestasis, lactic acidosis, glicose intolerance, GDM.

Chickenpox,
Herpes simplex- HSV virus.,2% of pregnant women.
Type1- oral, type 2- genital - dormant in nerve ganglia- reactivated to form lesions. Inv- swabs for cultures

Listeriosis-listeria monocytogenes
Found in soil, decayed matter and animals, soft cheese, pate, unpasturised dairy products, unwashed salads.
Hx: diarrhoea, vomitting, nausea, fever, sore thoat- often asymptomatic.
Patho: gram +ve bacilli
Inv: microbiology: blood culture, amniotic fluid culture, placental culture- serological test not reliable
Manag- IV antibiotics- gentamicin.
Compl- septicaemia, (poor prognosis) pnaumonia, meningitis. ⬇️ progn.
Pregn: miscarriage, chorioamnionitis, fetal death.

Progn- good if treated

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4
Q

What happens in multiple pregnancy?

A

Pregn inv more than 1 fetus.
Aetiology: monozygous: division of fertilised egg
Dizigous- fertilisation of >1 ovum
Assc- ⬆️ maternal age, african, prx hx, FHx, ovulation
Twins.. Triplets..
Hx- 1st trimester- incidental on USS, hyperemesis- ⬆️b-HCG.
Later- large-for-dates, multiple fetal parts on abdo exam. + ⬆️ fundal height.
Patho: NA.
Inv- confirm by USS, nuchal translucency.
Manag- antenatal- serial USS for fetal growth, monitor FBC( ⬆️anaemia) BP (⬆️eclampsia) GTT( ⬆️ diabetes)
Vaginalmdelivery: only of first twin cephalic
C/S- recomended for delayed delivery of 2nd twin, fetal distress of either twin, not vertex presentation of 1st twin.

Complications: miscarriage, hyperemesis, pre-eclampsia, anaemia (⬆️ plasma vol and fetal iron requirments), PPH, APH, diabetes (⬆️ steroid load) ,operative delivery, postnatal depression
Fetal: prematurity, polyhyrdaminos, cong malformations, IUGR (intra uterine growth restrtiction)’ fetal death.
Twin twin transfusiom syndrome.
Prognosis-
Twin fetal mortality 4 times higher than singletons.

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5
Q

What happens in Group B streptococcal (GBS) infx?

A

Most common early onset

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6
Q

What are some causes of maternal mortality?

How could we prevent this?

A
PE
Eclampsia
Haemorrhage
Infx
Cardiac diseases

Real killers:cz many women die during preganacy and they didnt even want a pregnancy at the first place.
Poverty
Ignorance
Desires of men

Real solution: literacy, economic growth,
Equality of dialogue between sexes.

School-based sex education
- could work in conjuction with easy access to contraception.
In 2007 -England and Wales- 160 pregnancies terminated in those

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7
Q

Some obstetric definitions

A

Gravidity- number of pregnancies woman had at any stage
Parity-refers to viable pregnancies that were delivered beyond 28weeks gestation. I.e. Para 2+1 = has had 2 pregancies beyond 28weeks gestation and 1- which was terminated before 28 weeks.
Debate- stillbirth-24weeks- so dont knwo which one to use..
Twins.. Should the be gravida 1 or 2?

Length-40 weeks from LMP
Expected delivery date (EDD) = 1 year and 7 days after LMP - 3 months.
Revised rule- add 10 days- more reliable

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8
Q

What would a pre-pregnancy counselling involve?

A

Reduce weight if obese
Ensure rubella and chickenpox immune prior to pregnancy
Asses risk for thrombophylaxis
Others:
Optimal control of chronic disease( eg diabetes) before contraception.
+ hypothyroidism as fetus cannot make thyroxine until 12weeks.

🔹Stop teratogens + seek advise-lithium, HIV drugs(didanosine and efavirenze)
🔹Folate supplements(help DNA regeneration) to avoid neural tube defects(NTD)( fetus abnormalities)
🔸Provide expert info in those at ⬆️ risk- so pregnancy or ots avoidance is an informed choice and tests like CVS (11 weeks) or Amniocentesis (16weeks) are planned.
🔹Regional genetic services
Inrelevant ethnics take bloods for thalassaemia or sicke cell.
🔹Avoidance for infx: sperm washing if HIV +ve male and HIV-ve woman.
🔹If past/Fx for thromboembolism screen for thrombophilia.

🔶Diet: to avoid NTDs+ cleft lip- folate rich food and folic acid 0.4mg daily> 1 month pre-conception. - brussels,sprouts, asparagus, spinach, blackeye beans, avoid liver and vit A(vit A embryopathy) & caffeine.

Smoking: ⬇️ ovulations, abnormal sperm production,- less penetrating capacity, ⬆️ rates of miscarry x2, preterm baby and lighter-176g mean.
Placenta praevia and abbruption
Reduced reading ability in smokers child up to 11Y
17% of mothers stop before or in pregnancy. Should be 100%!!!!

Alcohol consumption:
High levels: alcohol fetal syndrome. Does cross placenta and may affect fetal brain. 1-2u not shown to affect.
Miscarriage risks are higher among drinkers.
NICE- 5u/session is especially harmfull!

Spontaneous miscarry
8.9% in 20-40Y women, 74.7% in >45Y
After 3 miscarriages risk of next pregnancy Failure is 44.6% for nullips aged 25-29 and 35.4% in parous women.

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9
Q

Whats vit A embryopathy?

A

Retinoic acid embryopathy
Assc w/ cardiovascular (ventricular septal, aortic arch , )external ear deformity, cleft palate, micrognathia and central nervous malformations

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10
Q

What is an individualised care plan for DM?

A

Many features to be addressed- individualised care plan helps.
Chance for mum to talk to all her carers- all must sign up.
By documenting plan, mum and dad and team members are frequently the most reliable making sure things happen if they know what is expected- to check if pregnancy is monitored as planned.
In case of diabetes:
Joint clinic- MDT- obstertrician, diabetes physician, diabetic specialist nurse, diabetes midwife and dietician.
Care plan- antenatal (ANC) period till 6 weeks postpartum.
Advice about:
🔹Aspirin 75mg/24h Unitl delivery to reduce pre-eclampsia risk.
Targets for glycaemic control: every 2 weeks contact diabetic team about her blood levels.
- up to 20% develop proliferative retinopathy- retinal digital screening w/ mydriasis asap when pregnancy confirmed- if not screened 12M before. After 1st ANC appt and again at 16-20 weeks if retinopathy seen in initial screem in pregnancy and 28w if not seen at initial.
🔹Renal screening schedule (for microalbuminuria and protein dipstick at 1st appnt if nor screened in px 12M. Refer to nephrologist of creatinine >120mmol/L or protein excretion >2g/day.

🔶Fetal surveillance: 4chamber and outflow tract echo at 20weeks
USS at 28,32,36 w for fetal growth and amniotic fluid depth
🔹Cardiotocogram- twice weekly from 38weeks if waits for spontaneous labour rather than induction or C/S offered at 38w.

🔸Plan for delivery: if comorbidity like neuropathy or obesity arrange anaethetic assesm at 36w.
🔹Diabetes care after delivery- return to pre-pregnancy regimne- glycaemic control
Look for macrosomia in USS.

🔹Neonate care:
Feed asap, them 2-4hrs after birth to prevent hypoglycaemia. Gige IV glucose to to baby if symptomatically hypoglycaemic. Do not discharge to community till >24hrs old, feeding well, and able to maintain blood glucose levels.m
🔹Contraception
🔹Follow-up care after discharge- GTT at 6w Postpartum + annually- see if still diabetic in GDM( gestational DM)

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11
Q

What are the main physiological changes happening in pregnancy?

A

♦️Hormonal changes:
🔹Progesterone (synthesised by corpus luteum till 35 days post conception days and by placenta after.
⬇️ smooth muscle excitability (uterus,gut,ureters)
⬆️ body temperature.

🔹Oestrogens-(90% oestriol)
⬆️ breast and nipple growth, water retention and protein synthesis.
🔹Maternal thyroid enlarges due to ivreased production of colloid.
🔸Pituitary secretion of prolactin rises throughout pregnancy.
🔹Maternal cortisol-output- is increased but unbound levels remain constant.

♦️Genital changes- 100g non-pregnant uterus weighs 1100g by term. Muscle hypertophy occurs up to 20w- after–> stretching.
The cervix may develop ectropion(erosion)
Late in pregnancy- cervical collagen reduces.
Vaginal discharge increases due to cervical ectopy, cell desuamation and ⬆️ mucus production from vasocongested vagina.

Haemodynamic changes-
Blood: 10w-32w when it is 3.8L. Red cell volume rises. 18% if iron not taken- ⬆️30% at term if supplements taken hence Hb falls due to dilution - “Physiological anaemia”-
WCC (mean 10.5x10*9/L ), platelets, ESR (up to x4), cholesterol, b-globulin and fibrinogen Raised.
⬇️: albumin and gamma globulin.

Cardiovascular:
CO ⬆️ from 5L to 6.5-7L/min in first 10 w by ⬆️ stroke vol (10%) and pulse rate (15beats per minute) . Peripheral resistance falls (hormonal changes) ⭐️BP particularly diastolic falls during 2nd semester and rises again to non-pregnant level by term.
⬆️ venous distensibility and ⬆️ venous pressure (due to any pelvic mass) varicose veins may form. vasodilatation and hypotemsion stimulate RAAS- Main BP regulator in pregnancy.

Aorto-caval compression -20w gravid uterus compresses IVC (and lesser extend aorta) in supine women- ⬇️ venous return.
“Supine hypotension” -⬇️ CO by 30-40% –> place woman at left lateral to relieve and restore CO.

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12
Q

What other changes might pregnancy bring?

A
  1. Ventilation ⬆️ by 40%- TIdal vol rises. Increased depth of breath- progesterone effect.
  2. 02 consumption ⬆️ only by 20%. Breathlessness common- maternal PCO2 set lower to allow fetus for CO2 unloading.
  3. Gut motility ⬇️–> constipation, delayed gastric emptying, lax cardiac sphincter–> heartburns.
  4. Renal size ⬆️ by 1cm during pregnancy.
  5. Frequency of micturion ⬆️ - glomerular filtration rate ⬆️ by 60%_ later from bladder pressure by fetal head.
  6. Skin pegmentation- linea nigra, nipples, chloasma- brown patches on face- spider navi, palmar erythema, striae are common.
  7. Hair shedding reduced in pregnancy but extra hairs shed in puerperium.
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13
Q

How do pregnancy tests work?

A

+ve from 9 days conception or 23/28 cycle until 20w of pregnancy. Remain +ve after 5 days of miscarriage/ fetal death. False +ve rare. 96% sensitivity-urinary ones. 100% sensitivity serum -b -hCG.
Detect b- subunit of human chorionic gonadotrophin in early morning urine, so are +ve in trophoblastic disease.

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14
Q

What happens in pregnancy abd obesity? BMI>30 at booking

A

Long fat shadow over babys adult life- w/ risk of Heart disease, DM, metabolic syndrome, some cancers eg breast and lung.
Also risk of macrosomia, meconium aspiration.
Diet during pregnancy- low wt gain-correlates with preterm babies and prone to postnatal probs.
Onese women more prone to vid D deficiency so give Vit D (+ African origin) supplements while pregnant and breastfeeding.
If BMI> 30 at booking- offer diabetes screening- oral glucose tolerance test at 24-28 weeks + RF offer heparin thrombophylaxis 7 days postnatally +RF TED stockings.
Mobilse all obese women early.
If BMI >30 and require C/S- give IV prophylactic antibiotics and if subcutaneous fat >2 cm thick suture seperately to avoid infx.

BMI>40- heparin prophylaxis and TED stockings 7 days postnatally whatever mode of delivery is.

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15
Q

What do we do in Antenatal care? (ANC)

A

Aims: detect any disease in mum, ameliorate discomforts of pregnancy, monitor and promote fetal wellbeing, prepare mums for birth, minotor BP!! Is thrombophylaxis or aspirin needed?
Who: Midwives on 12 week. BMI>35 need consultant care.

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16
Q

What happens in the 1st ANC visit?

A

Language interprteter if she needs one.
Avoid using rekatives(confidentiality issues)
Hx: cycle length, LMP, contraception, drugs, past hx, surgery to abdo/pelvis, fertility probs, outcomes and complications in past pregnancies.
FHx of DM, BP, fetal abn, twins? Any concurrent illness? FGM- has she been ‘cut’? If FHx or past hx of DVT or embolism- screen for thrombophilia.
Is GDM a risk?- 75g glucose tolerance test
Past mental illness? If serious schizophrenia or bipolar disorder- or past postnatal probs get antenatal assignment: managment plain in notes.
Is she poor? Eg gas/electricity cut off? Unmarried? Unsupported? Sunpbject tomdomestic violence? Substance abuser? “Healthy start vitamins for women- dolic acid + vits C+D.
Avoid pate and blue/soft cheese- listeria
Toxoplasmosis advice- avoid liver

Examination:
Check heart, lungs, BP, weight(BMI) + abdomen. Is cervical smear given? Varicose veins? Sensitevley ask if genital organ cut.

Tests:
Blood: Hb, group (Abs, if RD -ve), syphillis and rubella +- chickenpox serology, HBsAg HIV test, sickle cell if black, Hb electrophoresis and 25-hydroxyvit D if relevant.
MSU- protein, bacteria, arrange tests to exclude Downs. If foreign, CXR for TB at 14weeks.
12week early USS to establish dates (cz it calculates exact gestation time) exclude multiple pregnancies, aid w/ Downs testss and an 18-20 week anomaly scan.
Suggest: dental visit, relaxation classes, ask about probs and anxities.
Advice- stop smoking, alcohol, diet, upcorrect use of seatbelt-abore or below bump not over it + adequate rest. Ensure knowlEdge of social cecurity benefits- usual exercise and travel- ok- avpid malarious areas- check with airline. Intercourse okay if no vaginal bleeding.

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17
Q

What happens in later visits?

A

Check urine for albumin, BP, fundal height.
Check lie and presentation at 36 w. Do Hb and Rh Abs at 28&34weeks- gibe anti-D at 28w of first pregnancy.
Visits: 10w booking

18
Q

What are some foods rich in vit D content?

A

Oily fish, meat, eggs, fortified mirgarine + breakfast cereal.

19
Q

How is the anti-D immunoglobulin used?

A

Only 20% of Rh -ve mothers have rh-ve babies.
500U at 28weeks and 34w to rhesus -ve women - In deltoid- buttock abs too slow;IV or SC if bleeding disorder. Asap after incident by 72hrs- some protection by 10days.
20+0 w do Kleihauer test (FBC bottle for maternal blood, fetal RBC therein are less susceptible to lysis- so can be counted to measure the bleed’s volume!! )
Take 28w blood sample for Abs before 28w anti-D.
❌ Do not give anti-D if already sensitised- ie Abs to anti-D present.
If risks ⬆️⬆️ for any bad incidence, give 250U 20w and do Kleihauer test.

What happens… The vaccine given in 1st oregnancy masks the antigens in the fetal RBCs so mother Abs will never recognise something foreign. As soon as they have recognised it.. Abs are made and will be present in every pregnancy. No point giving it.

1.Anti-D should be given in ectopic cases
2. Thretened miscarriage: in Rh-ve women. All given who will have surgery, medical TOPs or evacuation of hytadidorm mole unless already known to have anti -D Abs.
Given in spontaneous miscarry. Routine anti-D is not recommened for

20
Q

How does prenatal diagnosis come about?

A

Allows better tx for abnormal defect or TOP
High risk pregnancies:
Maternal age >35 (chromosome defects) , px abn baby, fhx of inherited condition.
Prob: anxiety while false +ves are a big problem !
Terminating normal fetuses, eg male fetus of carriers of x-linked conditions. Terminatinh female fetuses cz males value more.

Uss at 11-13 weeks- dates pregnancy, screens for nuchal translucency + chorionicity. Further anomaly scan at 18w. –> more external defects rather than internal as cong heart

21
Q

What prenatal diagnosis way is very promising?

A

Cell-free fetal DNA circulating in maternal blood

22
Q

High resolution USS and fetal translucency (FNT)- what is it?

A
Early screens (11-14w) may detect 59% structural abn + 78% w/ chromosomal abnormalities.
Detects CNS defects, neck abnormalities, GI, rena, defects.
Less good at detecting heart, limp spina brifida problems. 

Fluid accumulation in neck at 10-14w :increased fetal nuchal translucency,FNT, may reflect fetal heart F + be seen in serious heart anomalies and great arteries.

Stomh assc b/w chromosomal abnormality and FNT. The greater the extend, the greater risk abnormality. Usually 2.2mm. >3.5mm–> abn .
>6mm –> genetic or chromosomal abn..
1. ⬆️ risk or chromosomal abn
2. 6x ⬆️ risk of heart abnnorm
3. >6mm - rare- skeletal disease
4 . Assc w/ genetic condition- cystic hydroma
5. Could be structural- (6-11mm) immature lymph –+ not immune

23
Q

In what ways can we test for downs?

A

1.combined test-nuchal translucency (NT) + free ?-hCG +PAPP( pregnancy assc plasma protein) /PRAP-A ⬇️ 19.6% in smokers. + woman age.
10+3 -13+6 w. 86% trisomy21, 100% trisomy 18 and trisomy 13.

  1. Interigated test- 2nd trimester results- better than combined test.
    Involves NT+ PRAP-A in 1st trimester and quadriple test in 2nd. (❌ for triplets)
  2. Quadriple test- maternal AFP + unconjugated eostriol+ free bhCG / total bhCG + inhibin-A + womans age in 2nd tri. 15+0-20+0w

Emotional cost to mother…. Gaining informed consemt bout losing baby- most expensive- cz “never understood i can lose baby…” But… Full details at initial blood test–> Comes happy for the baby.. Leaves with ethical leaflets incolving death and disease and human sacrifices….

24
Q

Whats useful for women presenting in 2nd trimester?

A

Quadriple test

25
Q

What happens in preimplantation genetic diagnosis? (PGD)

A

IVF embryos are analysed for abnormalitites. Defect-free embryos are implanted.

  1. Genetic analysis of 1st polar body of an egg or 2nd one, or using blastomeres from cleavage-stage embryos. (B latest stage from which cells can be used- not used as much cz needs to be transferred at day 5/6.
  2. Flurescence in situ fertilisation (FISH) -used for analysis of chromosomes
  3. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis pf genes in monogenic diseases.

X-linked conditions- healthy male or non carrier female can be transferred.

26
Q

Under what circumstances is IVF utilised?

A

⬆️ risk of genetic diseases- monogenic disease carriers,
Chromosome abnormalities- translocation,
Concurrent infertility
Who repeatedly terminated due to abn prenatal tests.
Recurrent miscarriages-as translocation carriers)
Moral/religious objections to terminations.

27
Q

Whats the placenta?

A

Respiration, excretion amd nutrition of fetus.
Produces progesterone.
Immunologically protects fetus from rejection and allows for maternal IgG passage.
Blood flow: 600ml/L .
Changes throughout as Ca2+ and fibrin are deposited.
Xs Ca+–> smoking, xs fibrin: diabetes and rhesus, so ⬇️ fetal nutrition.

28
Q

What are some placental types?

How is the incidence increased? What can be done?

A

Vasa praevia - fetal levels risk damage and fetal bleed.

Placenta accreta: abnormal adherence of all part of the placenta to the uterus :
Placenta increta: myometrium infiltrated
Placenta perceta: if penetration reaches serosa
These 3- predispose to PPH + need hysterectomy.

Incidnce ⬆️ w/ px C/S. Diagnose prenatally- colour Doopler USS/MRI.

29
Q

What happens in placenta praevia? Whats the epidimiology?
How n it present?
What should we do after delivery?

A

Placenta lies in lower uterine segment . 0.5% of pregnancies.
Compl: sign haemorrhage by mother and fetus.
Avoid PV exams, advise non penetrative intercourse,
Assc- C/S , sharp curette TOP, endometritis, fibroids, >40Y.
3% at term.

Inv- TVS better than transabdominal- for localising placentas accurately- + Doppler US/MRI diagnose vasa praevia and accreta.
Serious- placenta covers internal os- C/S. If minor praevia- could try vaginal.

CF: APH- separation of placemta as the lower segment strecthes causinh bleeding. Or as failure of babes to engage- high presentation.

C/S - consultant anaesthetist+ steroid cover, crossmatched blood + haematologist.

Major praevia, admit 25% babes wt- neohrotic syndrome indication.

Blood may be taken from cord- for Hb, Coombs test, LFTs, blood group e.g rhesus disease, or infx screens.

30
Q

Some words about the placenta..

Whats the journey nutrients have to go through? What happens in pre-eclampsia?

A

spiral arteries- invaded by trophoblast- flooding the vast intervillous soaves w/ warm maternal blood- whooshing sounds at USS behind the fetal heart beat( sonic hand aid)

  1. Maternal blood space
  2. Syncytiotrophoblast,
  3. Trophoblast basement membrane
  4. capillary basement membrane
  5. capillary endothelium
  6. Fetal blood. .

In pre-eclampsia- trophoblast invasion is too shallow- no progress neyond the superficial portions of the uterine spiral arterioles. So these arterioles retain their endothelial lining and remain narrow, high- resistance vessels –> poor maternal blood flow. Mother may raise her BP to compensate for this.
Price–> eclampsia (seizure) ..

31
Q

What do we need thrombophylaxis for in pregnancy?

A

-hypercoagulable state
Cosider it if admitted..In antenatal period, start of labour + once delivery.
In all: avoid immobility and dehydration (amniotic fluids)
3 or more RFs - antenatal and postnatal LMWH.
Tx for 6w postpartum and then compression stockings.

Tx:
LMWH- enoxaparin asap as long as no PPH
+ 7 days after, at home.

. Recurent VTE- + antiphospholipid syndrome /antithrombin deficiency/ long term warfarin= high dose prohylactic LMWH.

32
Q

Whatbare some RFs indicating LMWH prophylaxis?

A
Starting as ealy in pregnancy as poss to ⬇️ risk
Age>35 
Early pregnancy BMI >30 
Smoker
Parity > 3 
Multiple pregnancy
Assisted reproduction
Gross varicose veins
Sickle cell disease /SLE
Nephrotic syndrome
Thrombophilia
IBD
Hyperemesis:dehydration
Pre-eclampsia
Immobility 3 or more days- eg pubic symphysis dysf. 
Labour lasting >24hrs
Major infx- nephritis, wound infx
Elective caesarian
Blood loss >1L/ transfused
Surgery in puerperium- eg suction evacuation of profucts of conception. 
Long travel time >4 hrs
Past thromboembolism
33
Q

Whatbare some minor sx of pregnancy?

A

🔶First 10 weeks- Amennorrhoea, N+V, bladder irritability. Breats engorge, nipples enlarge( darken at 12w) - montgomerry’s tubercles (sebaceous glands) become prominent.
Vulval vascularity ⬆️ and cervix softens and looks blue. (4w)
6-10w uterus more globular. Temp ⬆️ 35w.
Tx- weak steroid creams. Delivery cures it.

Ankle oedema- common, natural, measure BP + urine for protein. (Pre-eclampsia) , check legs for DVT- responds to leg elevation and rest. Reassure harmless unless preclampsia.

Leg cramps-33%_ raise foot behond 20cm. Worse at night.

Choasma- dark patch of pigment on face.

Nausea- 80%, V-50%. Start by 4w decline over following w.
Frequent small- meals, (not hungry - not vomit) , stress free environment. Assc w/ good outcome (⬇️ fetal losses) . Hyperemesis.

34
Q

When can a woman book appt to deliver?

A

At term, 38w onwards.

Otherwise, steroids not enogh for lungs.

35
Q

Home deliveries

A

Shut windows, dovet- adrenaline you get cold!! (Other times we run, keep hot.)
Charged phones
Place of delivery
Towels- we bring gas and air.
Midwives on call!
Worry- class- emergency! Transfer to hosp.
Reasarch: safe at home if low risks.

Adrenaline amd oxytocin for labour to start- adrenaline slows down oxytocin. Adrenaline: makes u dehydrated.

At home- relaxed.. Labour faster.

36
Q

How fast is delivery preterm?

A

32-34w very fast!

36- still preterm but can take hours.

37
Q

What happens in thyroid disease in pregnancy?

What biochemical changes happen in normal pregnancy?

A

Normal pregnancy mimics hyperthyroidism (⬆️ pulse, warm moist skin, anxiety, slight goitre)
1. T4 ⬆️ to maintain free T4
High levels of hCG mimic TSH
Reduced availability of iodine
TSH may fall below normal in 1st trimester (supressed by HCG)
✔️ best thyroid tests in pregnancy- free T4, free T3 + TSH.

Hyperthyroidism- pre-pregnancy- give antithyroid drugs.

In pregnancy- Graves disease- ⬆️ risk of prematurity, fetal loss and malformations. Severity falls in pregnancy- tx- propylthiouracil.
Neonatal thyrotoxicosis- 1% of them babies.

Hypothyroididsm- assc w infertility.
Untreated- ⬆️ risks of miscarry, stillbirth, premature labour and abnormalities. Tx- increase levothyroxine.

38
Q

What happens in HTN in pregnancy?

A

Chronic htn- predating pregnancy or started before 20w.
Gestational HTN- w/o proteinuria, develops after 20w gestation.
HTN+ proteinuria (+++) = pre-eclampsia.

Preconception- avoid ACEI, A2A blockers + chlorothiazide.
Clinic: b blockers not- only labetalol-

Antenatal- aim for BP _ 80
Give aspirin 75mg from 12w till delivery.
USS 28-30 + 32-34 - fetal growth, amniotic fluid vol, + umbil artery velocity. If abn- CTG.

GHTN- monitorhing for proteinuria.
Labetolol PO
If BP outside range

39
Q

How would u investigate a rash in pregnancy? What are some serious infx?

A

For rubbela amd parovovirus B19. (Both infect fetus) + measels.
Measels-6 days before delivery- human normal immune globulin.
Maternal chickenpox- aciclovir.

Rubella- childhood vaccine prevents susceptibility. (Reinfection- routine screening detects it- puerperal vaccine-live- avoid pregnancy 1M.

Cytomegalovirus (CMV)- causes more congenital retardation. Handicaps. Amniocentecis >20w detects transmission. + throat swab, urine culture and serology of kid as soon as born. The earlier the pregnancy the more damage-

Toxoplasmosis- 40% fetuses affected if mum has illness. Fever ,rash, eosiniphilia. If sx, CNS prognosis poor. Dx- lab IgG and IgM tests.
Tx- spiramycin.
Amniocentisis to see if fetus infected.
Affected kids- hydrocephalus, intracranial calcification. Encephalitis, epilepsy, mental and physical retardation, jaundice, hepatosplenomegaly, thrombocytopenia + skin rashes.
Tx- sulfadiazine, calcium folinate. Prednisolone given till CNS inflammation subsidies.
Prevention- avoid raw meat, wash hands if touched it, wear gloves if gardening or dealing with cat litter + avoid sheep ..what?!

HIV- antiretrovirals and prelabour Caesarian + avoidance of breastfeeding.

Intrauterine syphils: screening- to avoid 1 case. - tx - procaine penicillin-10D. If neonatal signs- hydrops, nephrosis- procaine penicillin IM

40
Q

What are some othern infx in pregnancy?

A

Listeria- 6-15:100 000pr. Sx- vomittinh, diarrhoea, fever, shivering, myalgia, headache, sore throat, cough, vaginitis. Miscarriage( recurrent) , premature labour + still birth may occur.
Infx- food- pates, soft cheese, milk) .
Do blood cultures in any pt with unexpected fever for >_48hrs. Serology, vag or rectal swabs❌ not help. Fetal distress like resp distress common.
Also- perinatal infx- 2+3rd trimester. –> meningitis.. Fever, hepatosplenomgealy.
Diagnose by culture of: blood, CSF, meconium, placenta.
Tx- ampicillin + gentamicin till 1 w after fever subsides.

Sheep-borne conditions-
Listerisosis, toxoplasmosis, ovine chlamdia(rare–> septicaemia + renal F + miscarriage. Dx- serology
Tx- erythromycin/ tetracyclin.

41
Q

What happens in Hep B? Hep E?

A

HBV- screen all for HBsAg. Carriers- persistand HBsAg >6M.
High infectivity- HBeAg, so anti-HBe Abs are -ve.
W/o tx-95% babes will develop hep B. 93%- chronic carriers at 6M.
Most- cirrhosis so immunization imp.
Tx- immunoglobulin IM + vaccinate babies of carriers and infc mothers ate birth. Do serology of vaccinated babies- at 12-15M. If HBsAg -ve and anti-HBs present- child protected.

Hep E- risk of maternal mortality- ⬆️ 25% in 3rd trimester. ;Death- Postpartum, preceded by fulminant hep failure, coma, massive PPH.
33-50% babes infected. Vaccine being developed.

42
Q

What happens in jerpex simplex?

A

HSV- neonate- blindness, ⬇️IQ, epilepsy, jaundice, resp distress, death in 30% if untreated.
2o HSV infx is 25% + recurrence in pregnancy not prob due to maternal Abs. If 1st ever genital herpes, refer to genitourinary clinic to screen her (and her partners) for other infx and corfirm its primary.
If in last trimester- oral aciclovir or valacicovir +/- elective caesarian.

Dx- PCR - type specific-
Avoid Fetal blood sampling , scalp electrodes + instrumental delivery.
Neonatal infx appears 5-12days.