1 / 33

Introduction to Obstetrics and Gynaecology

Introduction to Obstetrics and Gynaecology Clare Tower MBChB PhD MRCOG Senior Registrar in Obstetrics and Gynaecology Subspecialty Trainee in Fetal and Maternal Medicine/ Clinical Lecturer St Mary’s Hospital, Manchester Brief Overview Student booklets – read it!!

Télécharger la présentation

Introduction to Obstetrics and Gynaecology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to Obstetrics and Gynaecology Clare Tower MBChB PhD MRCOG Senior Registrar in Obstetrics and Gynaecology Subspecialty Trainee in Fetal and Maternal Medicine/ Clinical Lecturer St Mary’s Hospital, Manchester

  2. Brief Overview • Student booklets – read it!! • There are 3 teams – red/ blue/ green (4 of you on each) • Timetable for each team on Medlea • In addition: ward rounds • On call sessions • Specialist clinics

  3. What is expected • PBL booklet guides what you are expected to know • You will need to do some reading • Turn up – it’s the easiest thing to do • Minimum requirements: • 4 antenatal clinics • 4 labour ward rounds • 4 on-call sessions on labour ward • 4 gynae clinics • 4 gynae theatre lists • 2 consultant ward rounds

  4. Obstetric wards: SM4, SM5, SM6 SM4 – blue team SM5 – red SM6 – green Registrars/ SHOs do ward rounds daily Consultants – varied See the patients! Gynae wards SM9, SM10 SM9 – long stay SM10 – day cases, closed sat /sun Registrars/SHOs do ward rounds daily Consultants - vary The wards

  5. Obstetrics CDU = central delivery suite Triage Introduce yourself to coordinating midwives and the doctors Gynaecology GUR = gynae urgency room Sees gynae emergencies during the day until 5pm SM10 after 5pm Emergency work

  6. Vaginal examinations • Valuable skill • You will be expected to look like you have done a speculum before in the OSCE • Gynae clinic is a good place to learn • Examinations under anaesthetic – need written consent and YOU have to get this before going to theatre • Also write in the patient notes

  7. Specialist clinics • There are a limited number of these • You need to book them beforehand on Medlea • You still need to make contact with the person organising the clinic before – as specified in the student handbook • Swap clinics with other teams

  8. Partograms and assessment of progress in labour

  9. Overview • Definition of labour • Physiology – you can read this • Diagnosis and assessment • Partograms • Abnormal labour • Cardiotocographs

  10. Definition of labour • Regular painful contractions resulting in cervical dilatation • 3 stages • First • Second • Third

  11. Stages of labour • First Stage • Up to fully dilated • Two phases • Second Stage • Full dilatation until delivery of the baby • Third stage • Delivery of the placenta

  12. Latent phase Slow Contractions irregular Cervix: shortens (effaces) Softens Moves Dilates up to 3-4 cm Active phase Regular painful contractions Progressive cervical dilatation greater than 4 cm First Stage of labour

  13. Duration of labour

  14. Bishop’s score

  15. Assessments in labour • The partogram • Labour record • Useful overview if completed properly • Can be used to aid diagnosis in abnormal labours • Visual representation of progress

  16. Assessment • History and review notes (handhelds) • Physical observations: temp, pulse, BP, urinalysis • Assess contractions: length, strength, frequency

  17. Assessment • Abdominal palpation: • fundal height • lie • position • presentation • station • Vaginal loss • Show • Liquor • Blood loss

  18. Assessment • Assessment of pain – need for pain relief • Fetal heart rate • Pinard or doppler • Listen for one minute after each contraction • Differentiate from maternal • Normal rate: 110-160 • Vaginal examination • If appears to be in labour • With consent

  19. Normal labour

  20. Length of second stage • Can allow a ‘passive’ second stage for the head to descend • Epidurals • Total second stage less than 4 hours (NICE) • Pushing limited to 30 mins (multip) to 60mins (primip)

  21. Abnormal patterns of labour • Partogram can be used to identify abnormal progress in labour • Deep transverse arrest • Primary dysfunctional labour • ‘3Ps’ – passenger, passages, powers

  22. Cardiotocograph CTG • Cardio = fetal heart rate • Toco = uterine activity: • Hence 2 monitors – • Abdominal pressure transducer • Doppler for fetal heart rate • Used to indicate fetal hypoxia • Poor!! – no reduction in the rate of intrapartum hypoxic injury/ Cerebral palsy since introduction in the 1980s • Increases rates of intervention • Even with the worse trace – 60% will be normoxic babies

  23. CTG machine

  24. Normal CTG Fetal heart rate Toco = uterine activity

  25. Assessment of a CTG • DR C BRaVADO • DR = define risk • C= contractions • Timing and frequency • CTG cannot indicate strength • BRa = baseline rate • Normal 110-160 • beware changes in rate • Fetal heart increases in the presence of maternal tachycardia and increased temperature • Also increases with hypoxia and sepsis

  26. DR C BRaVADO • V= Variability • Band width • Should be more than 5bpm • If reduced can indicate fetal sleep/ maternal opiate use • A= Accelerations • Increase in baseline of more than 15bpm for more than 15 seconds

  27. DR C BRaVADO • D = Decelerations • = drops in fetal heart of more than 15bpm, lasting got more than 15 seconds • Time with contractions • Early – rare and benign • Late – pathological and indicate hypoxia • Variable – vary in timing and in pattern. Commonest and occur with cord compression • O = Overall • Make overall assessment taking into account all aspects

  28. Variability = 20 bpm Baseline rate accelerations Contractions Irregular 1-2:10 Normal CTG No decelerations

  29. Baseline rate = 170-180 Variability = 5 Late decelerations Abnormal CTG Contractions 4:10 No accelerations

  30. Abnormal CTG

  31. Abnormal CTG

More Related