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2. Trauma in Pregnancy. Major physiologic changesAltered anatomical relationshipsSigns and symptoms of injury may be alteredTreatment priorities are the sameUsually the best treatment for the fetus is the best treatment for the mother. 3. Trauma in Pregnancy. Resuscitation and stabilization may
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1. 1 Trauma in Obstetrics
2. 2 Trauma in Pregnancy Major physiologic changes
Altered anatomical relationships
Signs and symptoms of injury may be altered
Treatment priorities are the same
Usually the best treatment for the fetus is the best treatment for the mother
3. 3 Trauma in Pregnancy Resuscitation and stabilization may need to be modified to accommodate the altered physiologic and anatomic changes of pregnancy
2 patients
Consult OB/GYN early
Dont withhold X-rays (10 rads or more are teratogenic
4. 4 Priorities A. Airway
B. Breathing
C. Circulation
5. 5 Trauma in Pregnancy Physical trauma complicates 1/12 of pregnancies
Trauma is the #1 cause of non Obstetrical maternal deaths
Serious retroperitoneal bleeding following blunt abdominal trauma is more common in pregnant women as opposed to non pregnant
6. 6 Trauma in pregnancy Bowel injuries are less common in pregnant patients as opposed to non pregnant patients
The presence of vaginal bleeding and uterine hypertonicity is presumptive evidence of placental abruption
7. 7 Objectives A. Oxygen requirements
B. Blood replacement requirements
C.Proper patient positioning
D.Significance of fetal monitoring
E. Vaginal bleeding
8. 8 Anatomic and Physiologic Alterations of Pregnancy The Uterus is an intra pelvic organ until the twelfth week of gestation
At 20 weeks the uterus is at the umbilicus
At 36 weeks the uterus is at the costal margins
In the last 2-8 weeks the fetal head descends to become engaged in the pelvis
9. 9 Anatomic and Physiologic Alterations of Pregnancy Intestinal tract is displaced upward and posterior
As gestation continues the uterus becomes more vulnerable as the walls thin and there is less protection by amniotic fluid
Thromboplastin and plasminogen activator can be released with trauma to the placenta and uterus
10. 10 Hemodynamics Cardiac Output- Increases 1-1.5 L per minute by 10 weeks (Vena cava compression in the supine position can decrease CO by 30-40%)
Heart Rate- Increases up to 15-20 beats per minute at term
11. 11 Hemodynamics Blood Pressure- 5-20mmHG decrease (maximum in the second trimester) Returns near normal at term
Some women may exhibit profound hypotension in the supine position, turn patient to the left lateral decubitus position
12. 12 Hemodynamics Venous pressure- CVP is variable in pregnancy, the response to volume is the same as in the non pregnant state, (venous hypertension in the lower extremities is normal during the third trimester)
13. 13 Hemodynamics EKG- There may be a left axis shift of about 15 degrees
Flattened or inverted T waves in leads III, AVF and the precordial leads may be normal
Ectopic beats are slightly increased in pregnancy-
14. 14 Blood Volume and composition Plasma volume is increased and reaches its maximum at about 34 weeks (40-50% above pre-pregnant levels)
RBC volume increases but not as much as the plasma volume resulting in a lower hematocrit (the so called physiologic anemia of pregnancy)
15. 15 Volume Late pregnancy hematocrit of 31-35% is normal
Overall blood volume is up 50%
With hemorrhage a healthy pregnant women may lose 30-35% of their blood volume before exhibiting symptoms
16. 16 Blood composition WBC- can be up to 20,000
Fibrinogen and other clotting factors are elevated
Prothrombin and partial thromboplastin times may be shortened
Bleeding and clotting times are unchanged
17. 17 Blood composition Albumin falls (2.-2.8g/dl)
Serum osmolarity remain at about 280mOsm/L
A pregnant women is twice as likely as a non pregnant women to develop a DVT or PE (adding trauma to this increases the likelihood
18. 18 Respiratory Respiratory rate is unchanged
Tidal Volume is increased by 40%
Residual volumes fall
PCO2 pf 30mmHg is normal
Hyperventilation of pregnancy
Chest X-ray shows increased lung markings and prominent pulmonary vessels
19. 19 Gastrointestinal Gastric emptying is greatly prolonged (Pregnant women all have full stomachs)
The uterus may shield the intestines
The liver and spleen are unchanged
20. 20 Urinary tract GFR and renal blood flow increase during gestation
BUN and Creatinine are about half non pregnant levels
Physiologic dilation of the renal calyxes,pelves and ureters
Creatinine clearance increased to 150
21. 21 Endocrine Pituitary gland gets 30-50% heavier during pregnancy
Shock may cause Sheehans syndrome(pituitary necrosis)
22. 22 Neurologic Ecclampsia is a condition that may mimic a head injury
If a seizure occurs make sure the patient is evaluated for ecclampsia
23. 23 Initial assessment Position patient to avoid supine hypotension unless spinal injury is suspected
Left lateral positioning is preferred
If transport is needed displace uterus to left and elevate right hip
24. 24 Initial Assessment Primary survey
ABCs
Supplemental oxygen (re-breather mask
If ventilation is required mild hyperventilation
Crystalloid fluid resuscitation and early blood product administration
25. 25 Initial assessment Blood is shunted away from the uterus in a hypotensive state
The gravida can lose up to 35% of her blood volume before tachycardia, hypotension, and other signs of hypovolemia occur
The fetus may be in shock and the mother appear stable
26. 26 Initial assessment Avoid vasopressors because these further reduce uterine blood flow
2 large bore lines (14-16 gauge) fluid should be LR or NS replace at 3-1 for estimated blood loss
O2 saturations above 90%
27. 27 Initial Assessment With gun shot wounds to the abdomen exploration is mandatory
Stab wounds to the abdomen may be able to be observed in selected cases
28. 28 Secondary Assessment Uterine irritability
Fundal height and tenderness
Fetal heart rate and movement
Pelvic exam ( look for bleeding, premature dilation, rule out ROM by fern and nitrazine if indicated
29. 29 Secondary Assessment If possible place patient on fetal monitor to assess contractions and fetal heart rate reactivity
With any trauma an ultra sound exam is required to look for placental separation and possibly to obtain biophysical profile
30. 30 Secondary Assessment Ultrasound can be useful for determining gestation age, placental location, fetal status, amniotic fluid volume, and fetal position
31. 31 Monitoring Mother-BP, pulse, CVP if needed, respiratory rate, pulse oximeter
Fetus-preferentially continuous fetal and uterine monitoring
Placental abruptions can be seen 24-48 hours following trauma( if contractions are present Abruptio placenta is more likely)
32. 32 Monitoring If no contractions are present and the fetal heart rate is reassuring ACOG recommends 2-6 hours of monitoring
If less than 20 weeks monitoring may not be needed as long
33. 33 Definitive care Uterine rupture can present in massive shock with hemorrhage to a patient with minimal symptoms
Signs of uterine rupture on radiologic exams can be extended fetal extremities, abnormal fetal presentations, or free intraperitoneal air
34. 34 Definitive care If uterine rupture is suspected immediate surgical exploration is necessary
Abruptio placenta is the leading cause of fetal death after blunt trauma
Signs of abruption- Irritable uterus, tetanic contractions, tenderness, enlarging uterus
35. 35 Definitive care Other signs of abruptio- bleeding, Consumptive coagulopathy, maternal shock, pain
Retroperitoneal hemorrhage can be massive after blunt trauma or pelvic fracture
36. 36 Definitive care Remember Rh sensitization (Kleihauer-Betke)
Administration of Rho gam (D immunoglobin within 72 hours
Tetanus prophylaxis is the same as in the non pregnant patient
37. 37 Definitive care Perimortem cesarean delivery is unlikely to produce a living fetus if the mother has been dead for more than 20 minutes
38. 38 Summary Recognize the effect of anatomic and physiologic changes
Vigorous shock therapy
Recognize the unique spectrum of potential injuries
Stabilize the mother first because the fetuses life is dependant on the mother integrity
39. 39 Summary Fetal heart rate monitoring should be maintained during resuscitation and after stabilization
Less than 20 weeks gestation the fetus is non viable so treat the mother
Do not withhold diagnostic X-rays
Get an Obstetrician fast
40. 40 Summary Changes in vital signs can occur relatively late so the patient may be worse off than the vitals indicate
Ultrasound will miss an abruption less than 30% so be clinically aware