Ectopic pregnancy Flashcards
1
Q
Definition of ectopic pregnancy
A
- Implantation of an embryo outside the uterine cavity (1%)
- Most common site is the fallopian tube (95%)
- Implantation can also occur in the:
- Cornu (where uterus and fallopian tubes meet)
- Cervix
- Ovary
- Abdominal cavity
- Previous caesarean scar
2
Q
Risk factors for ectopic pregnancy
A
Risk factors → tubal epithelial damage → impaired gamete transport and faulty implantation
- Previous ectopic pregnancy
- PID
- Tubal surgery (sterilisation/reversal)
- IUD
- Assisted conception
- Smoking
3
Q
Complications of ectopic pregnancy
A
- Tubal rupture
- Intra-abdominal bleeding & shock
- Tubal infertility
4
Q
Clinical features
A
Symptoms
- Common
- Lower abdominal / pelvic pain
- Vaginal bleeding (brown)
- Uncommon
- Syncope / collapse
- Shoulder-tip pain (intraperitoneal blood loss)
Signs
- Tachycardia
- Hypotension
- Abdominal / rebound tenderness
- Cervical excitation
- Uterus smaller than expected gestation
5
Q
Differential diagnosis for ectopic pregnancy
A
Pain and bleeding in early pregnancy:
- Miscarriage
- Molar pregnancy
- Pregnancy-related degeneration of a fibroid
- Non-pregnancy related causes of bleeding in early pregnancy
- Cervicitis
- Cancer
- Trauma
- Non-pregnancy-related causes of abdominal pain
6
Q
Investigations for ectopic pregnancy
A
- Pregnancy test (urine hCG)
- Ultrasound (transvaginal)
-
Serial serum hCG (if uterus is empty)
- > 1000 IU/ml should be visible if intrauterine
- hCG rises/falls by 66% in 48h
- Declining/plateauing suggests ectopic/non-viable intrauterine pregnancy
- Laparoscopy
7
Q
Management of ectopic pregnancy
A
- Emergency admission
- Watchful waiting
- Medical management
- Methotrexate
- Surgical management (laparoscopic)
- Salpingectomy (removal of fallopian tube)
- Salpingostomy (incision into fallopian tube)