Physio of Preg., Labor, and Delivery Flashcards

1
Q

What are some mechanical changes that happen in mom’s thorax while pregnant?

A

Expanded circumference.
Subcostal angle becomes less acute.
Diaphragm rises higher.

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2
Q

Why might pregnant women get non-infectious or allergic nasal stuffiness and epistaxis?

A

Estrogen induces hyperemia and edema in the upper respiratory tract.

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3
Q

How does lung volume change in pregnancy? Implication?

A

Greater tidal volume, greater minute ventilation, less reserve.
Less reserve means more likely to have severe complications of asthma and resp. infections.

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4
Q

Is dyspnea of pregnancy common? What do you want to rule out?

A

Yes - happens to 60-70% of patients in later first or early second trimester.
Definitely rule out PE.

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5
Q

How does cardiac output change in pregnancy? What percentage does the uterus get?

A

Increases from about 4.5L/min to 6L/min.

Uterus will get about 17% of cardiac output by term.

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6
Q

How can physical posture affect C.O.?

A

Late in pregnancy, lying on back can cause gravid uterus to compress the IVC, decreasing C.O. and making everyone uncomfortable.

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7
Q

How do pregnant women adjust to the greater blood volume they have?

A

Progesterone decreases peripheral vascular resistance -> lower BP.

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8
Q

What is an observable effect of these CV changes on the heart?

A

Systolic ejection murmur is common.

diastolic murmur is not normal

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9
Q

Effect of increased body water on electrolytes?

A

Slightly reduced Na+ concentration, but not hyponatremic.

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10
Q

Do plasma volume and RBC volume increase by the same amount? What effect does this have? Why might this be good?

A

Plasma volume increases more, causing “physiologic anemia of pregnancy” -> decreased hematocrit.
This may actually be protective against hemorrhage, and help exchange of nutrients/waste/temperature.

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11
Q

What specific effects does estrogen have on coagulation?

A

Increases Factors I, VII, VIII, IX, and X.

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12
Q

Do PT and aPTT remain valid tests during pregnancy?

A

Yes.

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13
Q

How might you detect bleeding that you can’t see in a pregnant woman?

A

Bleeding will cause a drop in fibrinogen

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14
Q

Renal changes of pregnancy?

A

Renal hypertrophy, higher risk for infections, especially on the right side.
The uterus tends to rotate toward the right side…

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15
Q

Effect of pregnancy hormones on the kidney?

A

Progesterone causes dilated ureters and renal pelvises.. increased GFR… drop in creatinine… renal stuff.

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16
Q

Impact of progesterone on the GI tract?

A

All smooth muscle contractions are impaired, predisposing to…
Delayed stomach emptying.
Acid reflux.
Constipation.
Slow gall bladder emptying -> stones.
(increased portal venous pressure -> hemorrhoids… not sure if this is due to smooth muscle)

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17
Q

3 liver products increased in pregnancy?

Should LFTs be normal?

A

Fibrinogen, binding proteins (for steroids / thyroid hormone), clotting factors.
LFTs should be normal.

18
Q

When does most nausea/vomiting of pregnancy occur?

A

4-16 weeks.

19
Q

What are the 3 P’s of getting a baby out?

A

Passenger
Passage
Powers (“Push it.”)

20
Q

3 aspects of the “passenger” that affect delivery?

A

Presentation (cephalic vs. breach / transverse)
Size
Position (which way head is facing)

21
Q

Which position of the head is ideal as the baby is coming out?

A

Occiput-Anterior (face-down)

22
Q

What is the “zero station”?

A

The ischial spines.

23
Q

If the cervix is dilated by the baby isn’t descended, what do you suspect?

A

Cephalopelvic dysproportion.

24
Q

4 things that induce uterine contraction, physiologically?

A

Prostaglandins (E2, F2alpha)
Anything that increases intracelullar Ca++
Gap junctions
Increased oxytocin receptors

25
Q

2 things that help cervical ripening?

A

Collagenase, elastase.

26
Q

Difference in cervical effacement and dilation in first vs. repeat pregnancy?

A

In first labor, cervix gets to efface completely for dilating.
In subsequent labors, will often dilate without much effacement (can surprise you by rapidly progressing).

27
Q

What effect does cortisol have on uterine contraction?

A

Progesterone inhibits contraction. Estrogen promotes contraction (through upregulated oxytocin receptors).
Cortisol promotes conversion of progesterone to estrogen.

28
Q

Do progesterone levels drop during labor?

A

Surprisingly, no. They may be outcompeted by glucocorticoids…

29
Q

Review: What is normal cutoff for “term” labor?

A

After 37 weeks. Mean is at 40 weeks from LMP.

30
Q

3 stages of labor?

A

Stage 1: closed, fully dilated
Stage 2: fully dilated - delivery
Stage 3: placenta

31
Q

What are the 2 phases of stage 1 of labor?

A

Latent: variable duration, slow cervical dilation
Active: faster rate of cervical change, regular uterine contractions.

32
Q

What do modern data (the Zhang curve) say is the usual amount of cervical dilation at which the shift to rapid dilation occurs?

A

at about 4-6cm.

33
Q

3 signs of placental separation post-delivery of the baby? When should this occur?

A

Increased bleeding
Lengthening of the cord
Uterus rises, changes shape (discoid -> globular… whatever that means).
Should occur within 30 minutes of delivery.

34
Q

CV changes during / after labor?

A

Increase in C.O. by 10-15%, because blood no longer going to uterus.
Women must be kept on telemetry due to arrhythmia risk.

35
Q

4 degrees of birthing lacerations?

A

1st: vaginal mucosa, perineal skin
2nd: subcutaneous tissue
3rd: anal sphincter
4th: rectal mucosa

36
Q

4 operative delivery options?

A

Forceps
Vacuum
C-section
C-hysterectomy

37
Q

Main indication for C-hysterectomy?

A

Placental acreta - placenta too deeply imbedded in uterus, won’t come out, and mom will bleed out if not removed.

38
Q

What is dystocia? What injury is often caused?

A

Ant. shoulder gets stuck on pubic symphysis.

Pulling -> brachial plexus injury (don’t ask me which one…)

39
Q

What is monitored with External Fetal Monitoring? What’s a really worrisome sign (there are probably many..)?

A

Heart rate, uterine contractions.

Worrisome when fetal heart rate dips after contractions.

40
Q

1 downside mentioned about C-sections in terms of later pregnacy?

A

May increase risk of placental acreta in later pregnancy.