1 / 18

Obstetrical History and Physical Exam

Obstetrical History and Physical Exam. Jonathan Tankel FRCSC FACOG Dept of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Student Health Service, U of A jtankel@ualberta.ca. Obstetrical History. Early, accurate estimation of gestational age Identify patient at risk of complications

euclid
Télécharger la présentation

Obstetrical History and Physical Exam

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. Obstetrical History and Physical Exam Jonathan Tankel FRCSC FACOG Dept of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Student Health Service, U of A jtankel@ualberta.ca

  2. Obstetrical History • Early, accurate estimation of gestational age • Identify patient at risk of complications • Ongoing evaluation of health of mom and baby • Anticipate problems and intervene if possible • Patient education, communication

  3. Obstetrical History • Personal/Demographics: • Obstetrical History • Date, Gestation, sex(s), birth weight, mode delivery, length labor, anesthesia/analgesia, outcome, complications • Personal and family history: • Medical: Endocrine , CV/HPT/VTE, Renal, Neurologic, GI (NB Hepatitis), Psychiatric, Autoimmune, Infectious, Blood transfusions, Blood disorders (Thromobophilias, sickle cell, thalassaemia, anemia)

  4. Obstetrical History cont. • Gynecologic History: • Pathology/procedures • Abnormal pap’s and treatment thereof • Surgeries • Medications ( ? Safe in pregnancy) • www.motherisk.org • Allergies • Habits/Substance abuse (talk re alcohol)

  5. Obstetrical history cont. • Genetic History: • Congenital (NTD, Heart, Clefts) • Chromosomes ( Downs, mental retardation, autism) • Advanced maternal age • Inherited: Hemaglobinopathy, MD, CF, Huntington's, Hemophilia, Metabolic , “others?”

  6. Obstetrical History cont. • Ethnicity • Ashkenazi Jew (refer Genetic counselor): Tay sacs, Canavan, CF, Familial dysautinomia, Gauchers……………………, • French Canadian/Cajun: Tay Sacs • Mediterranean/Asian/African/Hispanic: Hemaglobinopthy “what is your family’s country of origin?” • Consanguinity • Recurrent Pregnancy loss

  7. Obstetrical History • LMP • LNMP • Cycle length • Recent use of hormonal contraception • IUCD use? When removed? • If someone comes in with abnormal bleeding, you must assume that they are pregnant

  8. Obstetrical history continued • Current pregnancy history: • Depends on gestation: • Nausea, vomiting, weight loss • Bleeding: when, how much(?), bright vs. dark, post-coital?, associated pain or cramps • Exposure radiation or toxic substances • Fetal Movement (8-20 weeks) • Contractions • Suspected leaking of amniotic fluid

  9. Obstetrical History:ESTIMATED DATE of Delivery • Document EDD by LMP and then EDD Confirmed • IMPORTANT both in prematurity as well as post dates • With regular menses: • Add 7 days to LMP and subtract 3 months • US important if irregular, unsure, on contraception • THE EARLIER THE BETTER!

  10. Obstetrical exam • Initial exam /1st Prenatal visit • BP, weight (BMI to help counseling), • General exam • Head/Neck: Thyroid • CVS: Murmurs • Abdomen: Size of uterus, Fetal Heart • Pelvic Exam: • PAP /Swabs if indicated, screen for chlamydia (CT screen recommended for all but can do Urine NAT) • Bacterial Vaginosis: Routine screen NOT recommend • At 12 weeks, can feel fundus

  11. Obstetrical exam cont • Follow up visits Concerns? • Smoking, stress, spousal abuse increases during pregnancy, drugs, work exercise • Fetal movement • Contractions • Bleeding at each • BP, weight, urine • Inspect abdomen: Fetal lie • Palpation of the abdomen: • Leopolds maneuvers • Symphyseal Fundal Height

  12. Obstetrical exam cont.SFH • Used as an indirect screen for fetal growth between 20 & 36 week. Between 20 and 36 weeks, grows one cm per week. • Correlates with weeks. So it will be 20 +/-2 cm at 20 weeks. (+/- 2 cm) • Measure with patient supine and legs straight • Measure in the midline, cross the umbilicus, must keep legs straight • Discrepancy > 3 cm: • ULTRASOUND

  13. Obstetrical exam:Clinical Pelvimetry • Use to be performed routinely to see if vaginal delivery advisable. • Research shown not useful in detecting CPD and thus labor and delivery should generally be attempted.

  14. Obstetrical exam cont:Leopolds maneuvers • Lie on back, shoulders slightly raised • 4 Maneuvers: • Palpate upper abdomen • Determine location of the back – firm and smooth • Pawlicks Grip: • Face feet, attempt to feel the fetal brow • Can also do an xray

  15. Obstetrical Exam:Bishops Score • NO EXAM IF BLEEDING till Low lying placenta/Previa are excluded • Bishops score: • Predict whether induction will be required, method of induction, has been used in assessing odds of preterm labor • Max score 13

  16. Obstetrical Exam:Dilatation C. Cervix is completely effaced.

  17. Obstetrical exam:Assessing Rupture of membranes • Nitrazine (pH Testing) and Ferning • Nitrazine 87-97% accurate: • pH Vagina normally acidic • pH > 7 can indicate ROM • Can also be increase with BV/Blood • Ferning 84-100% accurate • Due to fluids' protein and NaCl content, form crystals with drying

  18. Obstetrical exam:Station Use where the front of the head in line with the ischial spine.

More Related