1 / 28

Skenario Kasus

Skenario Kasus. Ibu A, 19 tahun, G1 hamil 39 minggu, dikirim bidan dengan tekanan darah 200/110mmHg. Merasakan mules-mules sejak 1 hari, dan saat datang ke bidan BJJ 140dpm dan dalam fase aktif dg pembukaan 5cm, porsio tipis, lunak, kepala di H2+, ubun2 kecil kiri depan.

keith
Télécharger la présentation

Skenario Kasus

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. Skenario Kasus • Ibu A, 19 tahun, G1 hamil 39 minggu, dikirim bidan dengan tekanan darah 200/110mmHg. Merasakan mules-mules sejak 1 hari, dan saat datang ke bidan BJJ 140dpm dan dalam fase aktif dg pembukaan 5cm, porsio tipis, lunak, kepala di H2+, ubun2 kecil kiri depan. • Tiba di UGD, tekanan darah 210/110mmHg, protein +3. His 3x/10menit/40detik, fase aktif dg pembukaan 8cm, kepala H3, UUK depan. Saat petugas melakukan pemeriksaan ibu tiba-tiba kejang menyeluruh.

  2. Skenario Kasus • Ibu B, 35 tahun, G5P3A1 hamil 38mgg dengan riwayat kejang menyeluruh di rumah. Tiba di UGD, kesadaran kompos mentis, tekanan darah 180/100mmHg, nadi 96x/mnt, pernafasan 24x/menit. Ibu segera diberikan MgSO4 bolus dilanjutkan dengan MgSO4 rumatan dan dipindahkan ke kamar bersalin • Saat datang ibu dalam keadaan fase aktif dengan pembukaan 6 cm. Duapuluh menit setelah pemberian bolus MgSO4 ibu kejang-kejang menyeluruh.

  3. Obstetric Emergencies

  4. Kondisi khusus dalam emergensi obstetri A. PEB/ EklampsiaB. Perdarahan Post PartumC. Distosia BahuD. Prolaps Tali Pusat

  5. Top Emergencies • Severe pre-eclampsia • Antepartum haemorrhage • Postpartum haemorrhage

  6. Pre-eclampsia • A pregnancy-induced hypertension • ≥ 20 weeks gestation • Previously normotensive • ≥140/90 mmHg on at least two occasions • + proteinuria ≥ 0.3g in 24h • ± oedema • Multisystem disease RCOG Green top guidelines The management of severe pre-eclampsia/eclampsia http://www.rcog.org.uk/files/rcog-corp/GTG10a230611.pdf

  7. Severe pre-eclampsia • Diastolic blood pressure ≥ 110 mmHg on two occasions • Or systolic blood pressure ≥ 170mmHg on two occasions • Significant proteinuria (at least 1g/litre) RCOG Green top guidelines The management of severe pre-eclampsia/eclampsia http://www.rcog.org.uk/files/rcog-corp/GTG10a230611.pdf

  8. Risk factors • First pregnancy (primigravida) • Age <20 or >35 yrs • Previous Hx or FHx • Multiple pregnancy • Certain underlying medical conditions • Pre-existing hypertension (superimposed pre-eclampsia) • Pre-existing renal disease • Pre-existing diabetes • Antiphospholipid antibodies

  9. Clinical features • History • Usu. asymptomatic • Headache • Drowsiness • Visual disturbance • Nausea/vomiting • Epigastric pain • Examination • Oedema (hands and face) • Proteinuria on dipstick • Epigastric tenderness (liver involvement)

  10. Complications (multisystem) • Head/brain • Eclampsia, Stroke/ cerebrovascular haemorrhage • Heart • Heart failure • Lung • Pulmonary oedema, Bronchial aspiration, ARDS • Liver • Hepatocellular injury, liver failure, liver rupture • Kidneys • Renal failure, oliguria • Vascular • Uncontrolled hypertension, DIC • HELLP

  11. Complications (fetal) • IUGR • Oligohydramnios • Placental infarcts • Placental abruption • Uteroplacental insufficiency • Prematurity • PPH

  12. Investigations • Maternal • FBC – platelets (HELLP) • Coag screen if platelets abnormal • U&Es (urate, renal failure) • LFTs (liver involvement) • Fetal • USS • Fetal size/growth, amniotic fluid volume, umbilical cord blood flow • CTG

  13. Management • No cure except delivery; Aim to minimise risk to mother in order to permit continued fetal growth • Antihypertensives • Methyldopa • Labetalol • Nifedipine • Eclampsia • Magnesium sulphate • Induction of labour • Antenatal steroids

  14. Antepartum haemorrhage Bleeding at > 24weeks (<24 weeks is miscarriage) Top 5 causes: • Uteroplacental causes • Placental abruption • Placenta praevia • Uterine rupture • Cervical lesions • Vaginal infections (?) • Vasa praevia • Unexplained

  15. Definitions • Placental abruption: part of the placenta becomes detached from the uterus • Placenta Praevia: The placenta is inserted wholly or in part into the lower segment of the uterus and therefore lies in front of the presenting part. ** AVOID PV exam; placenta praevia may bleed catastrophically **

  16. Signs and symptoms

  17. Stems • 30-year-old multiparous woman presents with scant vaginal bleeding, severe hypotension and a tender uterus at 36 weeks gestation. Fetal heart sounds are undetected. Abruptio Placentae • A22-year-old primigravid woman is seen at clinic at 28 weeks. She is noted to have ankle oedema and a BP of 160/110mmHg. Her urine demonstrates presence of protein. Pre-eclampsia • A 20-year-old primigravid woman is brought into casualty following a fit in her 36th week of pregnancy. She is noted to have a BP of 170/110mmHg and 2+ of protein Eclampsia

  18. Postpartum haemorrhage • Estimated blood loss ≥ 500ml • Primary: within 24hrs of delivery • Secondary: 24hrs-6weeks post delivery

  19. Causes (4 Ts) • Tone: uterine atony • Tissue: retained placenta or retained products, • Trauma: cervical or perineal, or ruptured uterus, • Thrombin: coagulation disorder

  20. Risk factors Top 5 (from a gynaecologist!) • APH • Multiple pregnancy • Retained placenta • Mediolateral episiotomy • Emergency LSCS

  21. Risk factors Most cases of PPH have no identifiable risk factors

  22. PPH – signs • Pale • Confused • Increased HR, reduced BP (late sign) • Reduced urine output • Obvious or hidden bleeding

  23. PPH Management Top 5 • Call for help • ABC • O2 • Large bore IV access x 2 • FBC, coag, cross match • Urinary catheter • Identify cause(s) of PPH • Control bleeding • Replace the blood loss

  24. Top 5: stages in management • Ensure 3rd stage complete – if not MROP • Rub uterine fundus to stimulate contraction +/- bimanual compression if required to stop uterine bleeding • Assess for cervical/vaginal wall/perineal tears – if present, repair

  25. Top 5: stages in management 4. Medical management of atony with oxytocic medicines • Syntocinon • Ergometrine • Carboprost • Misoprostol 5. Surgical management • Intra uterine balloon device • B lynch suture if at Caesarean section • Uterine artery embolisation/ligation • Hysterectomy

  26. Past paper A 24-year-old primigravida presents at 32 weeks in a previously uneventful pregnancy. She is symptom free apart from marked facial oedema, but her BP is sustained at 145/105mmHg and there is proteinuria (+) on testing. You arrange her admission for further investigation and management. • List 4 investigations that would help you assess the maternal condition

  27. Past paper Abnormal examination shows a fundal height of 26cm with apparently reduced liquor volume • List 3 ways ultrasound can be used to help assess the fetal condition • What other investigations would help reassure you about fetal well-being? • Delivery of the baby by caesarean section is planned, in the fetal and maternal interest. How can the administration of steroids help the survival of the pre-term infant? • What is the most likely diagnosis in this mother’s instance?

  28. Thank you

More Related