ACUTE ABDOMEN IN PREGNANCY Flashcards
acute abdomen in pregnancy
refers to any serious acute intra-abdominal condition accompanied by
-pain
-tenderness
-muscular rigidity
etiology of acute abdomen
1.obstetric (placental abruption, HELLP)
2.non obstetric (appendicitis, cholecystitis)
3.extra abdominal causes (cardiac pain, psychological abuse of drugs
4.exacerbated by pregnancy (gallbladder disease, acute pyelonephritis)
placental abruption
-premature separation of a normally situated placenta
-pain with or without vaginal bleeding
placental abruption clinical exam
-uterus larger than dates
-tense and tender
-fetal heart shows signs of distress
placental abruption US dx
-difficult to assess
-acute isoechoic clot to placenta with no flow on color doppler
-clot may be marginal, preplacental or retroplacental
appendicitis
-acute appendicitis can present in any trimester
-pain in the RLQ, most common presentation
appendicitis US
-often displaced by enlarging gravida uterus
-blind ending, noncompressible tube
-diameter >6mm
-look for appendicolith
use TV
-inflamed peri appendiceal fat is echogenic
-if raptured, focal fluid collection
appendicitis complications
-perforation
-peritonitis
-septicemia (blood poisoning by bacteria)
-miscarriage
-preterm labor
-intrauterine death
renal stone disease
ureteric dilatation, particularly suspicious for stone if dilatation stops abruptly
renal stone disease US
-use tv for distal ureter for ureterovesical junction stones
-stones = echogenic, posterior shadowing, twinkle artefact with color doppler
-uretic jets with color doppler
-measure intrarenal indices (RI)
-physiologic Calie stasis does not cause elevated RI
pyelonephritis
-enlarged kidney +/-parenchymal edema
-perinephric edema
-abscess or pyonephritis (collection) which may require drainage
gallbladder disease
second most common
-acute cholecystitis >40years
cholecystitis
-gallstones
-gallbladder wall thickening
-pericholecystic fluid
+ murphy sign
*REMEMBER RUQ PAIN AND ABNORMAL LFT MAY INDICATE PREECLAMPSIA
ovarian torsion
-maximum risk at 12-14 weeks and immediately after postpartum
-adnexal mass can undergo torsion in pregnancy
ovarian torsion US
-ovarian or paraovarian mass as lead point
-echogenic stroma
-ovarian enlargement
-peripheral follicles from edema
-hemorrhage/ necrosis/ infarct
-doppler to assess flow (flow does exclude clinical findings)
-lack of venous flow