Preterm labour Flashcards

1
Q

Preterm labour - def

A

Def = delivery between 24 and 37 weeks

- Common presentation of preterm labour = SROM

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2
Q

Preterm labour - RF

A
  1. Previous preterm birth or late miscarriage
  2. Multiple pregnancy
  3. Cervical surgery or uterine anomalies
  4. Infection or abruption
  5. Pre-eclampsia and IUGR
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3
Q

Preterm labour (acute) - ax

A

Hx

  1. Pain/contractions - onset, frequency, duration, severity
  2. Vaginal loss - SROM or PV bleeding
  3. Obstetric hx (check notes)

Ex

  1. Maternal pulse, temperature, respiratory rate
  2. Uterine tenderness (suggests infection/abruption)
  3. Fetal presentation
  4. Speculum - look for blood, discharge, liquor. Take swabs
  5. Gentle VE (not if PPROM!)

Ix

  1. FBE, CRP (if raised, suggest infection)
  2. Swabs
  3. MSU
  4. U/S for fetal presentation (malpresentation common) and estimated fetal weight (EFW)
  5. Consider fetal fibronectin (a protein not usually present in cervicovaginal secretions at 22-36 weeks; if +ve, more likely to deliver)

Mx

  1. Establish whether threatened or ‘real’ preterm labour - cervical length and fibronectin assay (?). Admit if high risk, inform neonatal unit and check fetal presentation with U/S
  2. Steroids (betametasone IM - 2 doses, 24h apart)
  3. Consider tocolysis (nifedipine, terbutaline) - if intact membranes?
  4. Liaise with obstetrician + neonatologist (esp if at margins of viability - 23 to 26 wks) - plan for mode of delivery + intervention if needed
  5. Give IV abx but only if labour confirmed
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