Placenta Praevia and Abruption Flashcards

1
Q

What is placenta praevia?

A

Placenta implanted in the uterine lower segment.

Low lying refers to placental site before lower segment formation.

It is a common cause of APH

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2
Q

What are the 4 stages of placenta praevia?

A

Stage 1:
Low lying placenta within 2cm of the internal os.

Stage 2:
Placental edge reaches but does not cross the internal os.

Stage 3:
Placenta partially covers the internal os.

Stage 4:
Placenta completely covers the internal os.

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3
Q

What are the risk factors for having placenta praevia?

A
Twins
High parity
Increased maternal age
Previous placenta praevia
Smoking
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4
Q

What are the complications of placenta praevia?

A

APH
Abnormal lie
Caesarean section

  • Placenta acreta (placental villi attach to the uterine wall)
  • Placenta percreta (placenta penetrates through the uterine wall)

*Serious complications can cause huge maternal bleeds associated with maternal mortality

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5
Q

How would a APH caused by placenta praevia present?

A

Painless
Bright red vaginal bleeding
Often in third trimester
Shock consistent with loss (shock is not common)

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6
Q

How should you manage a patient with placenta praevia antenatally?

A

If low lying placenta, confirm placenta praevia @ 32week USS.

If placenta is anterior and under a previous C-section scar:
3D USS to look for placenta acreta

If bleeding: admit to hospital and keep until delivery, give anti-D if indicated, maintain IV access consider steroids if less than 34 weeks

If bleeding during presentation to labour: Continuous CTG + blood count, clotting studies and x match.

If asymptomatic: admit at 37 weeks or delay admission until delivery if easy access to hospital

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7
Q

How should you manage a patient with placenta praevia intrapartum?

A

If stage 1 can deliver vaginally.

If major placenta praevia deliver by elective c-section at 38 weeks.

If placenta acreta is suspected (anterior placenta praevia in a lady with a previous c-section). Elective c-section at 36-37 weeks. Uterine incision away from placenta, prepare for massive haemorrhage, hysterectomy may be indicated in massive haemorrhage.

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8
Q

If a lady with placenta praevia has an APH what mustn’t you do?

A

A vaginal examination as can increase bleeding.

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9
Q

What advice should be given to a women with stage 2,3,4 placenta praevia?

A

Avoid penetrative sex as can cause bleeding.

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10
Q

What is placental abruption?

A

Premature seperation of the placenta from the uterine wall

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11
Q

How does placental abruption present?

A

Lower abdominal pain

*Dark red blood loss (port discolouration of amniotic fluid)
Shock inconsistent with bleeding (concealed)

Tender uterus (may be hard)

Fetal heart rate may show distress or be absent

*Note: blood may not be present may all be concealed.

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12
Q

What are risk factors of developing abruption?

A

Pre-eclampsia
Multiple pregnancy
IUGR
High parity and advancing age

Past history of abruption
Smoking and cocaine use

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13
Q

What are the complications of abruption?

A

Fetal death

Congenital abnormalities and IUGR more common (not caused by abruption but co-exist)

Haemorrhage can lead to DIC resulting in renal failure and potentially maternal death

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14
Q

How should you manage placental abruption?

A

USS to rule out placenta praevia if diagnosis uncertain

Mother:
ABC
Bloods: FBC, coag, x match
Give blood/IV fluids
Catheterise and measure UO
Give anti-D if indicated

Foetus:
CTG
If distressed urgent delivery by CS

If not distressed:
If greater than 37 weeks gestation induce labour, continuous monitoring with view to c-section if distress

If less than 34 weeks steroids (for lung maturation) close monitoring with view to c-section if ay distress

Plan for PPH

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15
Q

What are the most common causes of APH?

A

Placental abruption 1% of pregnancies (30% of APH)
Placenta praevia 2% of pregnancies (20% of AP)
Idiopathic bleeding

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16
Q

What are the more rare causes of APH?

A

Incidental genital tract pathology

Uterine rupture (previous scarred uterus, more common in induction or if traditional scar)

Vasa praevia: Bleeding from fetal vessels which run close to the internal os can be simply tested using the apt test (add alkaline to blood stays red, maternal blood will turn brown)*

*fetal blood is resistant to breakdown therefore stays red