Multiple Pregnancy Flashcards
Define
Pregnancy involving more than 1 foetus
- RFs: advanced maternal age, IVF, previous multiple pregnancy
- Occurs in 1 in every 80 pregnancies (~1%) – higher chances if IVF
- Hereditary factors
Chorion = number of placentae
Amnion = number of amniotic sacs
Monozygous – division of fertilised egg à IDENTICAL – 20% of twins
- 25% split 0-4 days à dichorionic diamniotic à 2 placenta and 2 amniotic sacs
S/S: λ sign
- 75% split 4-8 days à monochorionic diamniotic -> 1 placenta (share), 2 amniotic sacs
- S/S: T-sign
1% split 8-12 days à monochorionic monoamniotic à 1 placenta (share), 1 amniotic sac (share)
S/S: T-sign, ‘entangled cords’
- <1% split >12 days à conjoined twins
- Dizygous – fertilisation of 2 ovum by 2 different sperm à NON-IDENTICAL – 80% of twins
o DCDA – separate placentae, amnions, chorions
Gestational Age and Chorionicity:
Gestational Age and Chorionicity:
Gestational Age
- Offer 1st trimester USS when CRL 45-84 mm (11-13+6 weeks) to determine: EGA, chorionicity, and to screen for Down syndrome (use largest baby to estimate gestational age)
- Chorionicity – refers to the type of placentation (this is the most important feature to an obstetrician)
- Detect at time of detecting twin/triplet pregnancy by USS using number of placental masses, lambda (dichorionic) or T-sign (monochorionic) and membrane thickness
· Examine junction between the inter-fetal membrane and the placenta
· In DC pregnancies à triangular placental tissue projection (λ sign) into base of the membrane
· In MC pregnancies à no placental tissue projection (T-sign) into the base of the membrane
- If presenting after 14 weeks, determine chorionicity using all of membrane thickness, lambda sign, number of placental masses and disconcordant foetal sex
Signs and symptoms
Signs & symptoms (asymptomatic): FH = Foetal Heartrate
o 1st trimester à incidental on USS, hyperemesis – increased βHCG
o 2nd trimester à large for dates, multiple parts on abdominal exam
o Abdominal exam à increased SFH, multiple parts, >1 FH
Management
Antenatal:
- FBC at 20-24w -> query extra supplementation of iron or folic acid, and repeat at 28 weeks
- BP (increased chance of eclampsia) TTTS Monitoring / Growth Scans
- GTT (increased likelihood of diabetes) 16w (every 2w) for shared placenta pregnancies
20w (every 4w) for no shared placenta pregnancies
- Serial USS for foetal growths
- Monochorionic twins: scan at 12, 16 and every 2 weeks until delivery SHARED
- Dichorionic twins: scan at 12, 20 and every 4 weeks until delivery NO SHARING
- Monochorionic triplets: scan at 12, 16 and every 2 weeks until delivery SHARED
- Dichorionic triplets: scan at 12, 16 and every 2 weeks until delivery SHARED
- Trichorionic triplets: scan at 12, 20 and every 4 weeks until delivery NO SHARING
- TTTS screening = 16-24 weeks (every 2 weeks) – if shared placenta
- General growth scans = after 24w (every 2 or 4 weeks)
Specialist Care:
- Uncomplicated monochorionic diamniotic twin pregnancy should be offered at least 9 appointments with a healthcare professional, at least 2 should be with a specialist obstetrician
- Uncomplicated dichorionic twin pregnancy should be offered at least 8 appointments and at least 2 with a specialist obstetrician
- Uncomplicated monochorionic triamniotic or dichorionic triamniotic pregnancy should be offered at least 11 appointments and at least 2 with a specialist obstetrician
- Uncomplicated trichorionic triamniotic triplet pregnancy should be offered at least 7 scans and at least 2 with a specialist obstetrician
Pre-term birth (60% of twin pregnancies):
- Preventing Preterm Birth – do NOT use the following routinely to prevent spontaneous preterm birth:
- Bed rest at home or in hospital IM or vaginal progesterone
Cervical cerclage
Oral tocolytics
Corticosteroids -> will be useful if preterm birth is likely (should be targeted)
Timing of birth:
- 60% of twin pregnancies result in spontaneous birth before 37 weeks
- Offer continuous foetal monitoring (CTG); if needed: scalp electrode and foetal blood monitoring
- Offer elective birth if (if declined à weekly obstetrician appointments):
- Uncomplicated monochorionic twin – from 36 weeks (after course of steroids)
- Uncomplicated dichorionic twin – from 37 weeks
- Uncomplicated triplet – from 35 weeks (after a course of steroids)
Vaginal delivery (first twin is in the cephalic position; 2nd may be breech but this is ok)
· Second breech baby can be turned using Internal Pedalic Version (IPV)
Complications
Foetal Complications:
- IUGR (and discordant IUGR: when one baby is SGA and the other normal or LGA)
· Monitored with EFW discordance (not SFH) à difference in size >20% is an indicator of IUGR
· Aim to repeat scans at least every 4 weeks
- Down Syndrome (greater absolute risk as same risk PER baby so increased TOTAL risk)
- Structural Abnormalities (2x in monozygotic babies)
- Twin-to-Twin Transfusion Syndrome (TTTS)
- Intra-uterine death (IUD)
· For dizygotic twins, the other twin will be fine
· In monozygotic twins that share a placenta (monochorionic), this can be bad as the BP will drop in the surviving twins’ placenta à neurological damage in the surviving twin in 25%
Maternal Complications:
- Pre-eclampsia (more risk of abnormal vasculature development)
· Always check at every antenatal appointment
· Follow normal pre-eclampsia pathways
- Hyperemesis gravidarum (more bHCG)
- GDM (more placental lactogen and placental steroids so more likely to tip into diabetes)
- APH, PPH (stretched uterus)
- Anaemia and thrombocytopaenia (more required to sustain the two children)
Management of comp
TTTS – occurs in MONOCHORIONIC pregnancies…
Symptoms – sudden abdomen size increase, SOB
· Start diagnostic monitoring with USS from 16-24 weeks on a 2-weekly basis
· Delivered by 34-37 weeks
Management:
· Old treatment à amnioreduction
· New treatment (<26w) à foetoscopic laser ablation of vascular anastomoses
· New treatment (>26w) à delivery
Pathogenesis = direct arterial to venous flow in placenta
· Donor baby SGA / oligohydramnios
· Recipient baby LGA / polyhydramnios
· Diagnosed if >25% difference of EFW
· Risk to recipient baby > donor baby:
- More blood…
- More cardiac strain…
- Hydrops fetalis
- Selective Growth Restriction / disconcordant IUGR:
Selective reduction may be an option if it is early
Surveillance scans every 2 weeks
Abnormal Doppler waveforms = indication for delivery