PBL B11 W2 Flashcards
Pre-eclampsia
Hypertension after 20 weeks gestation and is characterised by hypertension of at least 140/90 and proteinuria during pregnancy.
Cause of pre-eclampsia
There is abnormal development of the placenta, where the trophoblasts are dysfunctional in their capacity for invasion of the myometrium which means spiral arteries maintain their muscular walls so blood flow through the spiral arteries is limited leading to placental hypoxia that causes endothelial damage. This occurs due to maternal immune system being active.
Features of pre-eclampsia in maternal body
Inflammation; increased natural killer cells and Th1 promote development of autoantibodies which reduces angiogenesis and worsens oxidative stress, causing poor utero-placental perfusion. Maternal vasoconstriction occurs which causes high BP and hypoxia. The endothelial damage drives platelet consumption and reduces platelet count and hypoxia causes elevation of liver enzymes.
Risk factors for pre-eclampsia
First pregnancy
High BMI
Maternal age over 40
Multiple pregnancy
Pre-existing conditions
Long interval between pregnancy
It can develop to eclampsia and cause seizures because of cerebral oedema.
When is labour induced?
Labour is induced when pregnancy is beyond 42 weeks gestation, preeclampsia, gestational diabetes, twins or IUGR.
When should labour induction be avoided?
It should be avoided with breech pregnancy, previous C-Section or placenta covers the cervix.
What pain relief is available in labour?
Laughing gas/nitric oxide: partial agonist at opioid receptors
Injection of opiate and local anaesthetic in the epidural space at the level of L4
Opiate such as pethidine injected intramuscularly
Which medications induce labour?
Oxytocin causes contraction of uterine smooth muscle
Prostaglandin causes cervical effacement which promotes dilation
What are the types of femake pelvis?
Gynaecoid, android, platypelloid and anthropoid.
What are the segments of the foetal skull?
Vault: contains parietal bone and portions of the temporal, frontal and occiptal
Face
Base
What is the latent phase of labour?
Latent phase is the onset of contractions with cervical effacement and cervical shortening and cervical dilation at 3-4cm. It is faster in primiparous women.
What is Stage 1 of labour?
The longest stage in labour with regular contractions and fully dilated at 10cm as the foetal head descends. Moulding occurs of the foetal cranial bones due to compression of maternal pelvis, with localised oedema swelling as foetal head presents.
What is Stage 2 of labour?
Active and passive contractions for propulsion of the foetus.
What is Stage 3 of labour?
Delivery of baby and placenta no more than 30 minutes later. Synthetic oxytocin and controlled cord contraction is used to speed up this stage. Delivery of the placenta creates open vascular beds that causes excessive bleeding, which must be prevented via uterine contractions around blood vessels to prevent post-partum haemorrhage.
What is controlled cord traction?
-> controlled cord traction is pulling the umbilical cord to encourage placenta separation from the uterus.