PIH, Pre-eclampsia and HELLP Flashcards

1
Q

When do we class hypertension as pregnancy induced?

A

If it occurs AFTER 20 WEEKS

Before that it is just essential hypertension or ‘pre-existing hypertension)

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2
Q

How serious are PIH and pre-eclampsia in pregnancy?

A

They are the second highest cause of indirect maternal mortality in the UK

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3
Q

How should a woman with pre-existing hypertension’s medications change for pregnancy?

A

She should stop ACE-is and be started on B-blockers e.g. LABETALOL or CCB e.g. Nifedipine if the B-B is CI’d

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4
Q

What is the difference between PIH and pre-eclampsia/

A

Pre-eclampsia is hypertension PLUS PROTEINURIA

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5
Q

What is thought to be an associated etiological factor in pre-eclampsia?

A

Poor trophoblast infiltration into the placenta during the first half of pregnancy
Impaired placental dysfunction and widespread vascular endothelial dysfunction

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6
Q

What are the two phases of the pathophysiology of pre-eclampsia?

A
  1. Poor trophoblast infiltration. During normal development trophoblasts invade maternal spiral arteries causing them to increase their diameter so that the flow of blood becomes low resistance and high flow - doesn’t happen as well in pre-eclampsia
  2. Reduced placental perfusion leads to placental ischaemia. This leads to endothelial dysfunction which causes changes such as maternal inflammatory response and reduced perfusion to the organs. Also over-activation of the coagulation system
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7
Q

Why does pre-eclampsia only really occur after 20 weeks?

A

Due to the physiological drop in blood pressure in the first trimester of pregnancy

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8
Q

How much protein has to be in the urine for it to be classed as proteinuria?

A

> 300mg/L

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9
Q

What are some risk factors for pre-eclampsia?

A

First pregnancy
FH (mother or sister with pre-eclampsia)
Extremes of maternal age
Obesity
PMH (Pre-existing HTN, Renal disease, thrombohphilias, SLE and DM)
Obstetric Hx: Multiple pregnancies, previous pre-eclampsia, hydatidiform mole, triploids, hydros fetalis, inter-pregnancy interval of >10y

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10
Q

What is eclampsia?

A

A seizure state associated with the feature of pre-eclampsia

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11
Q

How does blood pressure change in the normal pregnancy?

A

Fall slightly during first trimester (due to drop in SVR), reach lowest point at 22-24 weeks after which is steadily increases

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12
Q

How do we define hypertension in pregnancy?

A

> 140/90mmHg on more than 2 occasions more than 4 hours apart

OR >160/>110 mmHg on one occasion

OR Systolic >30mmHg above the booking blood pressure

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13
Q

What are some indications for admission in women with pre-eclampsia?

A

Blood pressure >170/110mmHg or >140/90 with 2+ protein
Those with significant symptoms: Headaches, visual disturbances, epigastric pain, oedema
Abnormal biochemistry
Need for treatment
Signs of fetal compromise

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14
Q

What are the principles of management in pre-eclampsia?

A

Get maternal BP <110mmHg with labetalol, nifedipine, hydralazine or methyl-dopa
Make regular assessment of the woman’s fluid balance- pre-eclampsia can change vascular permeability
MgSO4 can be given to reduce seizure risk

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15
Q

What is the cure for pre-eclampsia? When is this done?

A

DELIVERING THE BABY

Usually it is tried to get the woman to 34 weeks before delivering her

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16
Q

What can we do to help prevent the development of pre-eclampsia?

A

Prophylactic aspirin treatment

Calcium supplementation

17
Q

How should and eclamptic seizure be managed?

A

Turn the woman to her Left to prevent aorta-caval compression
Secure airway and administer oxygen
MgSO4 IV and monitor for signs of toxicity (Calcium gluconate can be given as reversal for MgSO4)
URGENT DELIVERY

18
Q

When/how do we give the aspirin prophylaxis therapy?

A

75mg aspirin from 12w delivery

Also reduces the risk of pre-term birth and neonatal mortality

19
Q

What does HELLP stand for?

A

Haemolysis, Elevated Liver enzymes, Low Platelets

20
Q

Levels of what will we seeing rising in HELLP that we can measure?

A

Lactate Dehydrogenase - LDH (a key breakdown product during haemolysis - high levels as well as low Hb suggests breakdown of blood cells)

AST - this is the first liver enzyme to become elevated and the rest will follow (remember ALP will be high anyway as it is produced by the placenta)

21
Q

How might HELLP syndrome present and who is it more common in?

A

Multiparous women - complication of pre-eclampsia

Usually it is found incidentally before symptoms start in women who are known to be pre-eclamptic and have their liver enzymes and platelets monitored but symptoms could include:

RUQ pain, epigastric tenderness and N&V

22
Q

What are some complications of HELLP?

A

Acute renal failure
DIC
Increased incidence of placental abruption

23
Q

How should HELLP be managed?

A

Try and correct disorder with coagulation and consider delivery as soon as possible