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Placental abruption
From WikEM
(Redirected from Placental Abruption)
Contents
Background
- Premature separation of placenta from uterus
- Usually occurs spontaneously but also associated with trauma (even minor trauma)
- Usually occurs at >15 weeks gestation
- Must be considered in patients who presenting with painful vaginal bleeding near term
- Abruption may be complete, partial, or concealed
- Amount of external bleeding may not correlate with severity
Risk Factors
- hypertension
- Trauma
- Smoking
- Advanced maternal age [1]
- Multiparity
- Prior placental abruption
- Thrombophilia
- Cocaineabuse
- History of C-section or other uterine symptoms
Clinical Features
- 'Painful vaginal bleeding (may be absent if retro-placental)
- Characteristically dark and the amount is often insignificant
- But up to 20% have no vaginal bleeding or pain
- Severe uterine pain
- Uterine contractions
- Hypotension
- Nausea and vomiting
- Back pain
- Premature labor
- Fetal distress
- Increasing fundal height
Differential Diagnosis
Abdominal Pain in Pregnancy
<20 Weeks
- Ectopic pregnancy
- First trimester abortion
- Complete Abortion
- Threatened Abortion
- Inevitable Abortion
- Incomplete Abortion
- Missed Abortion
- Septic abortion
- Ovarian torsion
- Incarcerated uterus
- Malposition of the uterus
- Non-pregnancy related causes
>20 Weeks
- Labor/Preterm labor
- Placental abruption
- Placenta previa
- Vasa previa
- Uterine rupture
- Vaginal trauma
- HELLP syndrome
- Chorioamnionitis
- Incarcerated uterus
- Malposition of the uterus
- Non-pregnancy related causes
- Placenta accreta
- Placenta increta
- Placenta percreta
Evaluation
- Type & Cross
- CBC
- Platelets
- PT/INR
- PTT
- Fibrinogen
- D-dimer
- Fibrin Degraded Products
- Pelvic US
- Specific, not Sensitive (as low as 24% sensitive)
- Cannot be used alone to rule-out placental abruption if negative
- Can rule-out placenta previa
- If available, obtain fetal heart monitoring
- Consider FAST exam if trauma
Management
- Fluid resuscitation
- Transfuse blood products (as needed)
- Emergent OB/GYN consult
- If unavailable consider C-section in ED
- Consider minimum 6 hours observation even if abruption not identified, if mechanism is concerning
Complications
Maternal
- Hemorrhagic shock
- DIC
- Uterine rupture
- Multi-organ failure
Neonatal
- Neurodevelopmental abnormalities
- Death: 67 to 75% rate of fetal mortality
See Also
References
- ↑ Rosen's