Obstetric Emergencies Postpartum Hemorrhage and Hypertension Annelee Boyle, MD, FACOG Assistant Professor Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology Division.

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Presentation transcript:

Obstetric Emergencies Postpartum Hemorrhage and Hypertension Annelee Boyle, MD, FACOG Assistant Professor Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine University of Virginia School of Medicine

Disclosures

Pregnancy-related mortality in the United States: Source: CDC Pregnancy Mortality Surveillance System

Obstetrics and Gynecology, May 2014

Causes of pregnancy-related death in the United States: Source: CDC Pregnancy Mortality Surveillance System

Maternal mortality is only the tip of the iceberg

Obstetrics and Gynecology, February 2012

93% of deaths preventable! – Berg et al. Preventability of pregnancy related deaths: results of a statewide review. Obstet Gynecol 2005; 106: Common mistakes: – Under-recognition of blood loss – Under-recognition of hypovolemia – Failure to act decisively – Failure to restore blood volume Postpartum Hemorrhage

Recognize the extent of blood loss Dildy et al, Estimating Blood Loss: Can Teaching Significantly Improve Visual Estimation? Obstetrics & Gynecology. 104(3): , September 2004.

Recognize the extent of hypovolemia Class 1Class 2Class 3Class 4 EBL in ml< 750ml ml ml >2000ml EBL in % Vol.<15%15-30%30-40%>40% Pulse<100>100>120>140 BPNormal or ↑↓↓↓ RR >35 UOP>30ml/h20-30ml/h5-15ml/hnegligible Mental State Slightly anxious Mildly anxious Anxious, confused Confused, lethargic

Obstetrics and Gynecology, May 2014

Systolic BP 160 Diastolic BP >100 Heart Rate 120 Resp Rate 30 Oxygen Sat <95% on room air Urine output <35ml/hr for 2 hours Agitation, confusion, or unresponsiveness Shortness of breath or a non-remitting headache in a patient with pre-eclampsia – Mhyre et al. The maternal early warning criteria: a proposal from the national partnership for maternal safety. Obstet Gynecol 2014;124: Early warning signs

Act decisively/Restore blood volume

Rule number one: Postpartum Hemorrhage is a definition, not a diagnosis! Post-Partum Hemorrhage

Actively manage the third stage of labor Pearls for Atony

Consider additional utero-tonics for those at highest risk of PPH Pearls for Atony

Have a low threshold for going to the OR for repair. Pearls for Lacerations

Source: California Maternal Quality Care Collaborative

60% of deaths are preventable! – Berg et al. Preventability of pregnancy related deaths: results of a statewide review. Obstet Gynecol 2005; 106: Common mistakes: – Failure to adequately control blood pressure – Failure to recognize HELLP syndrome – Failure to diagnose and treat pulmonary edema Preelcampsia

Systolic BP 160 Diastolic BP >100 Heart Rate 120 Resp Rate 30 Oxygen Sat <95% on room air Urine output <35ml/hr for 2 hours Agitation, confusion, or unresponsiveness Shortness of breath or a non-remitting headache in a patient with pre-eclampsia – Mhyre et al. The maternal early warning criteria: a proposal from the national partnership for maternal safety. Obstet Gynecol 2014;124: Early warning signs

Control Blood Pressure

Hi Annelee. Hope you’re doing well and liking your new job. It’s 10:30 pm here and for me, that’s the middle of the night so rather than be friendly and “chat”, I’m going to get straight to the point – it’s business… So our hospital protocol essentially regurgitates ACOG, but it doesn’t specify that it is for use only with preeclamptic/eclampic patients. Would you use it for someone with chronic HTN also, barring known renal disease or other cause of the HTN? Thanks! Love, Aunt Crunchy

Recognize HELLP Syndrome

The most important paper on HTN in pregnancy in the last year

SBP >160 DBP >110 Platelets < 100,000) LFTs >2x normal Creatinine > 1.1 Pulmonary edema New-onset cerebral or visual disturbances Right upper quadrant pain American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Hypertension in pregnancy: executive summary. Obstet Gynecol 2013;122:1122–31. Severe Features of Preeclampsia

Recognize and treat pulmonary edema

“If you’re going down take everybody else with you.” – Susan Modesitt, Gyn Oncologist The UVA way (or maybe it was UNC)

David Barker

The Barker Hypothesis The Thrifty Phenotype Fetal Origins Hypothesis

Intrauterine Growth Restriction

30 years from now

Thank you!!!