Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-17 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 13, 2007 7:57


1202 Pregnancy Complications for the Internist

Imaging
■Transvaginal US: more helpful than transabdominal US to assess
intrauterine content and pelvis, adnexal mass or fetal cardiac activity,
fluid or clots in pelvis, placenta previa
differential diagnosis
■Normal intrauterine pregnancy (IUP)
■Abortion: threatened, missed, inevitable (complete/incomplete),
septic
■Gestational trophoblastic neoplasia (GTN): confirmed on US with
characteristic “snowstorm” pattern
■Ectopic pregnancy: potentially life- and fertility-threatening
■Preeclampsia/eclampsia
■Placental abruption
■Membrane rupture
management
What to Do First
■Beta-HCG (+)
■Order US
■Assess stability of patient: if unstable go straight to OR
■Assess risk factors for ectopic pregnancy: higher with history of prior
ectopic, PID, STD, abdominal/pelvic surgery, infertility, poststeril-
ization
■Assess likelihood of IUP vs ectopic pregnancy

General Measures
■Threatened & missed abortion: IUP, cervical os closed and minimal
bleeding
■Inevitable abortion: os open, usually bleeding, assess likelihood of
complete vs incomplete
■Septic abortion: start antibiotics before D&C
■GTN:
➣CXR
➣Assess high or low risk for persistent GTN post D&C: high risk
factors include eclampsia, acute pulmonary insufficiency, theca-
lutein cysts >5 cm, uterus >20 wks, coexistent fetus, uterus large
for dates, beta-HCG >100,000 IU/mL, maternal age >40 y
➣Suspected ectopic pregnancy:
➣If stable with positive beta-HCG and no IUP seen on US, obtain
quantitative beta-HCG and rapid serum progesterone
Free download pdf