- Some patients may not have the classic presentation of abruption, especially with posterior implantation.
- Consider a diagnosis of placental abruption for every patient in premature labor. Carefully monitor patients to exclude or establish this diagnosis.
- Absence of vaginal bleeding does not exclude placental abruption.
- DIC/coagulopathy may occur even if clotting factors initially are within reference ranges. Continue to monitor clotting factors.
- Normal ultrasound findings do not exclude placental abruption.
Friday, April 3, 2009
Medicolegal Pitfalls :
Complications :
Maternal complications :
- Hemorrhagic shock
- Coagulopathy/DIC
- Uterine rupture
- Renal failure
- Ischemic necrosis of distal organs (eg, hepatic, adrenal, pituitary)
Fetal complications :
- Hypoxia
- Anemia
- Growth retardation
- CNS anomalies
- Fetal death
Deterrence/Prevention
- Treat maternal hypertension.
- Prevent maternal trauma/domestic violence.
- Prevent smoking and substance abuse.
- Diagnose placental abruption at an early stage in high-risk groups (eg, maternal hypertension, maternal trauma, association with domestic violence, smoking habit, substance abuse, advanced maternal age, premature ruptured membranes, uterine fibromyomas, amniocentesis).
Treatment :
Prehospital Care :
Provide emergency care at the advanced life support (ALS) level to all patients with suspected placental abruption. This care includes the following:
- Continuous monitoring of vital signs
- Continuous high-flow supplemental oxygen
- One or 2 large-bore IV lines with normal saline (NS) or lactated Ringer (LR) solution
- Monitoring amount of vaginal bleeding
- Monitoring of fetal heart
- Treatment of hemorrhagic shock, if needed
Emergency Department Care :
ED care depends on stage of gestation and severity of symptoms.
- Closely observe the patient.
- Administer supplemental oxygen.
- Continuous fetal monitoring.
- Administer IV fluids.
- Perform aggressive fluid resuscitation to maintain adequate perfusion, if needed.
- Monitor vital signs and urine output.
- Crossmatch 4 units of packed red blood cells. Transfuse, if necessary.
- Perform amniotomy to decrease intrauterine pressure, extravasation of blood into the myometrium, and entry of thromboplastic substances into the circulation.
- Immediately deliver the fetus by cesarean delivery if the mother or fetus becomes unstable.
- Treatment of coagulopathy or disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) may be necessary. Some degree of coagulopathy occurs in about 30% of severe cases of placental abruption. The best treatment for DIC as a complication of placental abruption is immediate delivery.
Consultations :
Consult an obstetrician as soon as possible.
Imaging Studies
Ultrasonography helps determine the location of the placenta to exclude placenta previa.Ultrasonography is not very useful in diagnosing placental abruption.
- Retroplacental hematoma may be recognized in 2-25% of all abruptions.
- Recognition of retroplacental hematoma depends on the degree of hematoma and on the operator's skill level.
Laboratory Studies :
- Hemoglobin
- Hematocrit
- Platelets
- Prothrombin time/activated partial thromboplastin time
- Fibrinogen
- Fibrin/fibrinogen degradation products
- D-dimer
- Blood type
Clinical Diagnosis :
Classification of placental abruption is based on extent of separation (ie, partial vs complete) and location of separation (ie, marginal vs central). Clinical characteristics include the following:
- Class 0: asymptomatic. Diagnosis is made retrospectively by finding an organized blood clot or a depressed area on a delivered placenta.
- Class 1: mild and represents approximately 48% of all cases. Characteristics include the following:
No vaginal bleeding to mild vaginal bleeding
Slightly tender uterus
Normal maternal BP and heart rate
No coagulopathy
No fetal distress
- Class 2: moderate and represents approximately 27% of all cases. Characteristics include the following:
No vaginal bleeding to moderate vaginal bleeding
Moderate-to-severe uterine tenderness with possible tetanic contractions
Maternal tachycardia with orthostatic changes in BP and heart rate
Fetal distress
Hypofibrinogenemia (ie, 50-250 mg/dL)
- Class 3: severe and represents approximately 24% of all cases. Characteristics include the following:
No vaginal bleeding to heavy vaginal bleeding
Very painful tetanic uterus
Maternal shock
Hypofibrinogenemia (ie, <150 mg/dL)
Coagulopathy
Fetal death
symptoms :
Patients usually present with the following symptoms:
- Vaginal bleeding - 80%
- Abdominal or back pain and uterine tenderness - 70%
- Fetal distress - 60%
- Abnormal uterine contractions (eg, hypertonic, high frequency) - 35%
- Idiopathic premature labor - 25%
- Fetal death - 15%
Causes :
- Maternal hypertension - Most common cause of abruption, occurring in approximately 44% of all cases
- Maternal trauma (eg, motor vehicle collision [MVC], assaults, falls) - Causes 1.5-9.4% of all cases
- Cigarette smoking
- Alcohol consumption
- Cocaine use
- Short umbilical cord
- Sudden decompression of the uterus (eg, premature rupture of membranes, delivery of first twin)
- Retroplacental fibromyoma
- Retroplacental bleeding from needle puncture (ie, postamniocentesis)
- Advanced maternal age
- Idiopathic (probable abnormalities of uterine blood vessels and decidua)
Frequency/ Mortality/ Morbidity
Frequency
Abruptio placentae occurs in about 1% of all pregnancies throughout the world.
Mortality/Morbidity
Maternal and fetal death may occur because of hemorrhage and coagulopathy. The fetal perinatal mortality rate is approximately 15%.
Pathophysiology
Severity of fetal distress correlates with the degree of placental separation. In near-complete or complete abruption, fetal death is inevitable unless an immediate cesarian delivery is performed.
