Maternal changes in pregnancy (repro) Flashcards
Maternal changes in pregnancy
- major changes in multiple systems
- causative factors: high levels of steroids, mechanical displacement, foetal requirements
- pregnancy is a physiological event
- systems usually return to normal after delivery, but not all
Maternal system in pregnancy
- to diagnose abnormality in pregnancy, changes in the changes need to be detected
- however pregnancy may exacerbate a pre existing condition
- uncover hidden or mild condition
Changes in the system
Changes designed to cope with several main events:
- increase in size of uterus
- increased metabolic requirements of uterus
- structural and metabolic requirements of foetus
- removal of foetal waste products
- provision of amniotic fluid
- preparation for delivery and puerperium
Systems in which changes occur
- energy balance
- respiratory system
- cardiovascular system
- gastrointestinal system
- urinary system
- endocrine system
Hormones that cause most of the change
Placental peptides: - hCG -hPL - GH Maternal steroids: - placenta takes over ovarian (CL) production around week 7 Placental and foetal steroids: - progesterone - oestrogen - oestriol Maternal and foetal pituitary hormones: - GH - thyroid hormones - prolactin - CRF
Effects of placental steroids
- renin/angiotensin system
- respiratory centre
- GI tract
- blood vessels
- uterine myometrial contractility
Gain in weight
Total weight gain 12.5-13kg:
- foetus plus placenta: 5kg
- fat and protein: 4.5kg
- body water: 1.5kg (excluding intravascular, interstitial, intracellular)
- breasts: 1kg
- uterus: 0.5-1kg
- ideally keep to less than 13kg
- failure to gain or sudden change needs monitoring
Energy balance
need to increase energy:
- output - to cope with increased respiration and cardiac output
- storage - for foetus and for labour and puerperium
gain in fat and protein stores is 4-5kg:
- increased consumption and reduced use
- mainly laid down in anterior abdominal wall
- utilised later in pregnancy and puerperium
Basic metabolic rate
rises by:
- 350 kcal/day mid gestation
- 250 kcal/day late gestation
- these are 75% foetus and 25% uterus
9 calories = 1g fat therefore 40g fat for 350kcal ie 1 large mars bar
Glucose
- need increased availability in 2nd trimester
- active transport across placenta as foetal energy source
- foetus stores some in liver
1st trimester maternal reserves:
- pancreatic beta cells increase in number
- plasma insulin increases
- fasting serum glucose decreases (laid down as stores and used by muscle)
2nd trimester foetal reserves:
- hPL causes insulin resistance ie less glucose into stores results in increased availability in serum glucose (more crosses placenta) but can cause diabetes
Total water gain
- foetus
- placenta
- amniotic fluid
- oedema (lungs, connective tissue ligaments, leakage, swollen ankles)
- uterine muscle
- mammary gland
- plasma volume (sodium retention, resetting of the osmostat, decrease thirst threshold, decrease in plasma oncotic pressure (albumin))
Respiration
oxygen consumption is increased
process:
- increases respiratory centre sensitivity to CO2 and thoracic anatomy changes so ribcage is displaced upwards and ribs flare outwards
- causes woman to breathe more deeply
- minute volume increases 40%
- arterial PO2 increases 10% and PCO2 decreases 15-20%
- this facilitates gas transfer and O2 increases and CO2 decreases in the mother
Maternal blood
- maternal plasma volume increases 45%
- red cell mass increases 18%
- increased efficiency of iron absorption from gut
- Haemodilution is apparent anaemia as concentration of Hb falls
- changes in white cells and clotting factors makes blood hypercoagulable (increases fibrinogen for placental separation, but increased risk of thrombosis)
Foetal blood
- foetal blood has increased Hb and altered in type
- leads to increased O2 binding
- therefore O2 given up by maternal Hb
- smoking increases maternal carboxy-Hb which is more permanent and reduces the increased binding
- leads to foetal hypoxia
Cardiovascular system (heart)
Expanding uterus: - pushes heart round - changes ECG and heart sounds Increased cardiac output: - increased heart rate and stroke volume - begins as early as 3 weeks to max 40% at 28 weeks - for maternal muscle and foetal supply