Vaginal Bleeding in Late Pregnancy

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Vaginal Bleeding in Late Pregnancy

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Vaginal Bleeding in Late Pregnancy. Objectives. Identify major causes of vaginal bleeding in the second half of pregnancy Describe a systematic approach to identifying the cause of bleeding Describe specific treatment options based on diagnosis. Causes of Late Pregnancy Bleeding. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Vaginal Bleeding in Late Pregnancy

Page 1: Vaginal Bleeding in Late Pregnancy

Vaginal Bleeding in Late Pregnancy

Page 2: Vaginal Bleeding in Late Pregnancy

Objectives

• Identify major causes of vaginal bleeding in the second half of pregnancy

• Describe a systematic approach to identifying the cause of bleeding

• Describe specific treatment options based on diagnosis

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Causes of Late Pregnancy Bleeding

• Placenta Praevia• Abruption• Ruptured vasa praevia• Uterine scar disruption• Cervical polyp• Bloody show• Cervicitis or cervical ectropion• Vaginal trauma• Cervical cancer

Life-threatening

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Prevalence of Placenta Praevia

• Occurs in 1/200 pregnancies that reach 3rd trimester

• Low-lying placenta seen in 50% of ultrasound scans at 16-20 weeks– 90% will have normal implantation

when scan repeated at > 30 weeks– No proven benefit to routine screening

ultrasound for this diagnosis

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Risk Factors for Placenta Praevia

• Previous caesarean delivery• Previous uterine instrumentation• High parity• Advance maternal age• Smoking• Multiple gestation

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Morbidity and Placenta Praevia

• Maternal haemorrhage• Operative delivery complications• Transfusion• Placenta accreta, increta or

percreta• Prematurity

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Patient History – Placenta Praevia

• Painless bleeding– 2nd or 3rd trimester, or at term– Often following intercourse– May have preterm contractions

• “Sentinel bleed”

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Physical Exam – Placenta Praevia

• Vital signs• Assess fundal height• Fetal lie• Estimated fetal weight (Leopold)• Presence of fetal heart tones• Gentle speculum exam• No digital vaginal exam unless

placental location known

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Laboratory – Placenta Praevia

• Haematocrit or complete blood count

• Blood type and Rh• Coagulation tests

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Ultrasound – Placenta Praevia

• Can confirm diagnosis• Full bladder can create false

appearance of anterior praevia• Presenting part may overshadow

posterior praevia• Transvaginal scan can locate

placental edge and internal os

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Treatment – Placenta Praevia

• With no active bleeding– Expectant management– No intercourse, digital exams

• With late pregnancy bleeding– Assess overall status, circulatory stability– Full dose Rhogam if Rh-– Consider maternal transfer if premature– May need corticosteroids, tocolysis,

amniocentesis

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Double Set-Up Exam• Appropriate only in marginal praevia

with vertex presentation• Palpation of placental edge and fetal

head with set up for immediate surgery

• Caesarean delivery under regional anaesthesia if:– complete praevia– fetal head no engaged– non-reassuring tracing– brisk or persistent bleeding– mature foetus

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Placental Abruption

• Premature separation of placenta from uterine wall– Partial or complete

• “Marginal sinus separation” or “marginal sinus rupture”– Bleeding, but abnormal implantation

or abruption never established

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Epidemiology of Abruption

• Occurs in 1-2% of pregnancies• Risk factors

– hypertensive diseases of pregnancy– smoking or substance abuse (e.g.

cocaine)– trauma– overdistension of the uterus– history of previous abruption– unexplained elevation of MSAFP– placental insufficiency– maternal thrombophilia/metabolic

abnormalities

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Abruption and Trauma

• Can occur with blunt abdominal trauma and rapid deceleration without direct trauma

• Complications inculde prematurity, growth restriction, stillbirth

• Fetal evaluation after trauma– Increased use of FHR monitoring may

decrease mortality

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Bleeding from Abruption

• Externalized hemorrhage• Bloody amniotic fluid• Retroplacental clot

– 20% occult– “Couverlaire” uterus

• Look for consumptive coagulopathy

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Patient History - Abruption• Pain = hallmark symptom

– Varies from mild cramping to severe pain– Back pain – think posterior abruption

• Bleeding– May not reflect amount of blood loss– Differentiate from exuberant blood show

• Trauma• Other risk factors (e.g. hypertension)• Membrane rupture

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Physical Exam - Abruption

• Signs of circulatory instability– Mild tachycardia normal– Signs and symptoms of shock

represent > 30% blood test

• Maternal abdomen– Fundal height– Leopold’s estimated fetal weight, fetal

lie– Location of tenderness– Tetanic contractions

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Ultrasound - Abruption

• Abruption is a clinical diagnosis!• Placental location and appearance

– Retroplacental echolucency– Abnormal thickening of placenta– “Torn” edge of placenta

• Fetal lie• Estimated fetal weight

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Laboratory - Abruption

• Complete blood count• Type and Rh• Coagulation tests • Kleihauer-Betke not diagnostic, but

useful to determine Rhogam dose• Preeclampsia labs, if indicated• Consider using drug screen

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Sher’s Classification - Abruption

Grade I mild, often retroplacental clot identified at delivery

Grade II tense, tender abdomen and live fetus

Grade IIIIII AIII B

with fetal demise- without coagulopathy (2/3)- with coagulopathy (1/3)

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Treatment – Grade II Abruption

• Assess fetal and maternal stability• Amniotomy• IUPC to detect elevated uterine tone• Expeditious operative or vaginal

delivery• Maintain urine output > 30cc/hr and

haematocrit > 30%• Prepare for neonatal resuscitation

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Treatment – Grade III Abruption

• Assess mother for hemodynamic and coagulation status

• Vigorous replacement of fluid and blood products

• Vaginal delivery preferred, unless severe haemorrhage

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Coagulopathy with Abruption

• Occurs in 1/3 of Grade III abruption• Usually not seen if live fetus• Etiologies: consumption, DIC• Administer platelets, FFP• Give factor VIII if severe

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Epidemiology of Uterine Rupture

• Occult dehiscence vs. symptomatic rupture

• 0.03-0.08% of all women• 0.3-1.7% of women with uterine scar• Previous caesarean incision most

common reason for scar disruption• Other causes: previous uterine

curettage or perforation, inappropriate oxytocin usage, trauma

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Risk Factors – Uterine Rupture

• pervious uterine surgery

• congenital uterine anomaly

• uterine overdistension

• gestational trophoblastic neoplasia

• adenomyosis• fetal anomaly• vigorous uterine

pressure• difficult placental

removal• placenta increta

or percreta

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Morbidity with Uterine Rupture

• Maternal– haemorrhage with anaemia– bladder rupture– hysterectomy– maternal death

• Fetal– respiratory distress– hypoxia– acidaemia– neonatal death

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Patient History – Uterine Rupture

• Vaginal bleeding• Pain• Cessation of contractions• Absence of FHR• Loss of station• Palpable fetal parts through

maternal abdomen• Profound maternal tachycardia and

hypotension

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Uterine Rupture• Sudden deterioration of FHR pattern is

most frequent finding• Placenta may play a role in uterine rupture

– Transvaginal ultrasound to elevate uterine wall– MRI to confirm possible placenta accreta

• Treatment– Asymptomatic scar disruption – expectant

management– Symptomatic rupture – emergent caesarean

delivery

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Vasa Praevia• Rarest cause of haemorrhage• Onset with membrane rupture• Blood loss is fetal, with 50% mortality• Seen with low lying placenta,

velamentous insertion of the cord or succenturiate lobe

• Antepartum diagnosis– amnioscopy– colour doppler ultrasound– palpate vessels during vaginal

examination

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Diagnostic Tests – Vasa Praevia

• Apt test – based on colorimetric response of fetal haemoglobin

• Wright stain of vaginal bleed – for nucleated RBCs

• Kleihauer-Betke test – 2 hour delay prohibits its use

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Management – Vasa Praevia

• Immediate caesarean delivery if fetal hear rate non-assuring

• Administer normal saline 10-20 cc/kg bolus to newborn, if found to be in shock after delivery

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Summary

• Late pregnancy bleeding may herald diagnoses with significant morbidity/ mortality

• Determining diagnosis important, as treatment dependent on cause

• Avoid vaginal exam when placental location not known