Title: Abortion%20Complications%20Management%20Workshop
1Abortion Complications Management Workshop
2Earlier Procedures are Safer-- CDCs Abortion
Mortality Surveillance System
- Currently, gestational age strongest risk
factor for abortion-related mortality - Lowest risk of death abortions lt 8 weeks
-
- Mortality risk is increases 38 for each
additional week of pregnancy
Bartlet 2004
3Abortion Related Mortality
- 1st Trimester
- Infection (33)
- Hemorrhage (14)
- 2nd Trimester
- Hemorrhage (40)
Paul 2009
4Emergency Prevention
- Emergency carts, boxes, cards on site
- Appropriate history patient selection
- Pre-op labs Hgb
- Careful dating (clinical /- dating)
- Adequate cervical prep (miso, lam)
- Vasopressin in PCB gt 12 wks (Edelman 2006)
- Uterotonics available
- Transfer agreements w/ nearby hospitals
5Procedural Pearls
- Careful exam for uterine axis
- Cautious dilation
- Avoid overconfidence
- Develop 6th sense
- Low threshold to use os finders, US, hCGs
- Careful evaluation of POC
- Proceed quickly to next action
- Develop stress readiness
6TEACH Simulation Innovations
- Papaya a memorable MVA PCB model
- Historically used as an abortifacient
- In dialects means vagina
- Pitaya dragon fruit helpful model for
practicing comp management steps - Also thought to be helpful in pregnancy
Paul, 2005 Goodman NAF 2013
7Case 1
- 24 y/o G4P3, 2 prior c/s, 8w5d desiring AB
- MVA quickly fills up with blood
- You empty it, recharge and it again fills with
blood. - You ask your assistant to prepare another MVA but
it promptly fills with blood when attached to the
cannula. - What do you suspect? What do you do?
8Demo and Group Brainstorm
9Causes of Hemorrhage
- 4 Ts
- Tissue Retained Clot, Tissue, Hematometra
- Tone Uterine Atony
- Trauma Perforation, Cervical Lacerations
- Thrombin Rare Bleeding Disorders, DIC
ALSO 2013
10Risk Factors for Hemorrhage
Cause Risk Factors
Tissue Incomplete procedure Less surgical experience Hematometra Abnormal placentation
Tone Increasing EGA Prior C/S Previous obstetrical hemorrhage Increasing maternal age General anesthesia
Trauma Uterine flexion Increasing EGA Nulliparity Inadequate cervical dilation
Thrombin Personal / FH bleeding or disorder Anticoagulation (esp. increasing EGA)
SFP Guideline 2012
11Algorithm 7 Ts
- 6 Ts 2 steps each
- 4 Ts (Tissue, Tone, Trauma, Thrombin)
- Treatment plan
- Transfer
- (Teamwork with a leadership role)
12Tissue
- 4 Ts Think tissue first
- Re-aspiration
13Tone (Atony)
- Medications
- Misoprostol 800-1000 mcg SL/ BU/ PR
- Methergine 0.2 mg IM, IC, IV (HTN)
- (Min evidence for 1 particular agent)
- Massage
SFP Guideline 2012
14Trauma
- Assess bleeding source
- Walk cervix
- Cannula test
- Ultrasound
- Think perforation if free fluid
15Free fluid in cul-de-sac
16Thrombin
- Bleeding history?
- Appropriate tests
- clot test, repeat hgb, coags
- Note Women taking anticoags did not have
clinically significant increased VB lt 12 weeks
Kaneshiro 2011, SFP Guideline 2012
17Additionally
- Treatment
- Start IVF
- Balloon tamponade (30-80 cc)
- Transfer
- Assess VS q 5 minutes
- Initiate transfer
- (Teamwork with a leadership role)
- Communicate with patient delegate roles
- Stay calm under pressure
18Individual Simulation
- Groups of 3
- 1 provider, 1 assistant, 1 tester
- 15 minutes for each provider 1-2 run throughs
- 1 point for each step
- Please complete and hand-in assessment
- These patients dont respond to usual measures
- Give provider opportunity to think it through
19Review Hemorrhage Algorithm 7 Ts
- Recognize heavy bleeding initiate algorithm
- 6 Ts 2 steps each
- 4 Ts (Tissue, Tone, Trauma, Thrombin)
- Treatment
- Transfer
- (Teamwork)
20Case 2
- 22 y/o G2P0 woman after uncomplicated 10 week
abortion - Called from recovery to evaluate for uterine pain
with hypotension - DDx and evaluation?
21Emergencies Specific to Surgical
AbortionTissue Acute Hematometra
- Pathophysiology
- Relative cervical stenosis plus uterine
hypotonia - Leads to retention of clotted blood in uterus
- Diagnosis
- Usually within first hour post-procedure
- US shows clotted blood in uterus
-
22Emergencies Specific to Surgical Abortion
Tissue Acute Hematometra
- Diagnosis
- Vital Signs
- May be hypotensive orthostatic(HoTN with
standing) - Signs
- Uterine enlargement / tenderness on exam
- Symptoms
- Usually little or no vaginal bleeding
- Patient may be asymptomatic when supine
- Severe cramping, lower abdominal pain, rectal
presssure - Dizziness/faintness
23 Emergencies Specific to Surgical Abortion
Tissue Acute Hematometra
- Management
- Re-aspiration usually provides complete
resolution - If not resolving or to prevent re-accumulation,
consider uterotonics
24Case 3
- 33 y/o G4P3, h/o CS x 2, 12 wk EGA
- Dilation mildly difficult
- While inserting cannula into retroflexed uterus,
you feel cannula get hung up at one point, and
then slide in easily without a stopping point.
Patient feels something sharp. - Prevention? DDx?
- What should you do now?
25Trauma Uterine Perforation
- 1st Tri Fundal -
- Few complications
- Advanced GA
- More likely lateral
- Bleed more
- Incidence
- 0.1 3 / 1000
-
SFP Guideline 2012
26Emergencies Specific to Surgical Abortion
Trauma Uterine Perforation
- Three types
- Benign - midline with blunt instrument, no
suction - Intermediate perforation with suction on, no
abdominal contents are seen or serious bleeding - Serious - perforation with suction on, and
abdominal contents (bowel, omentum, etc.) seen or
heavy bleeding occurs -
27How to Prevent?
- Increasing experience
- Careful exam re-examine if necessary
- Shorter wide speculum
- Traction on tenaculum
- Posterior placement for a retro-flexed uterus
- Os finder
- US guidance early
- Consider rigid curved cannula to get angle
- Cervical ripening with misoprostol
28Emergencies Specific to Surgical Abortion
Trauma Uterine Perforation
- If prior to start of abortion
- STOP immediately
- INFORM of what is happening
- US re-identify uterine cavity, evaluate bleeding
- OBSERVE in recovery room 1-1/2- 2 hours
- Antibiotics
- If stable, d/c home with phone f/u x 1-2 days
- Reschedule abortion 1-2 weeks later
- Alternatively, at clinician discretion, complete
procedure under US guidance
29Emergencies Specific to Surgical Abortion
Trauma Uterine Perforation
- Type 2 - Intermediate Risk
- Suction on no excess bleeding or abd contents
- Stop suction
- Remove cannula without suction
- US to re-identify uterine cavity, evaluate
bleeding - May occur at end of procedure ? uterus empty
- OBSERVE 1-1/2- 2 hours or send for observation
- Antibiotics
- At clinician discretion, complete procedure under
US guidance or with laparoscopic visualization
30Emergencies Specific to Surgical Abortion
Trauma Uterine Perforation
- Type 3 - Serious Risk
- Perforation with suction on
- Intra-abdominal contents seen in cx or POC
- /- Severe pain or excessive bleeding
- Stop procedure immediately
- US to identify uterine cavity, evaluate bleeding
- Antibiotics re-check hgb abd exam
- Must be transferred, usually operated on (at the
discretion of the admitting physician) - Stable patient may be evaluated using laparoscopy
- But usually lapartomy to run bowel
- As needed UA Embolization, Hysterectomy
31Emergencies Specific to Surgical Abortion
Trauma Cervical Laceration
- Pathophysiology
- May occur inadvertently during sounding or
dilation - Or withdrawing sharp fetal parts
- Diagnosis
- Laceration obvious at time of procedure or after
- Persistent, bright red bleeding after procedure
- Examination
- Walk cervix with o-rings
- If visible note location, length
- If not visible cannula test
- start at fundus, slowly withdraw to ID site
32Emergencies Specific to Surgical Abortion
Trauma Cervical Laceration
- Management
- External/Low
- Cervical lac lt 2 cm in length usually heal
without leaving a defect and require no repair - Pressure /- vasopressin, silver nitrate, monsels
- Exception ? brisk bleeding that continues ?
repair - High
- Consider vasopressin, clamping
- Often require surgical repair in OR
33Hospital Transfer
- Call for ambulance
- Inform front office
- Duplicate pertinent charting
- Notify ER / OB
- Notify medical director
34Summary
- Hemorrhage is a common cause of abortion-related
mortality. - 50 of women have no risk factors
- Critical to prepare
- Tissue is more common cause after abortion than
postpartum, where tone (atony is 70). - 40 of post-abortal hemorrhage may be controlled
by medications alone.
Frick 2010 SFP Guideline 2012
35Key Points
- Keep good habits
- Develop 6th sense
- Avoid overconfidence negative self-talk
- Have low threshold to use tools os finders, US
- Have a life line (by phone)
- POC eval hCGs as needed
- Develop stress readiness quarterly scenarios
- If you do enough, youll have comps
36Questions Thank you
- Please fill out evaluations!