TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
- Patients with abruption may be in shock and need full resuscitative measures
- Transport in the left lateral recumbent position
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- Airway, breathing, circulation (ABCs), oxygen
- Cardiac monitor
- Placement of large-bore IVs
- IV crystalloid resuscitation
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Maternal cardiac and tocographic monitoring
- Continuous fetal monitoring
- Transfuse PRBCs, fresh frozen plasma (FFP), cryoprecipitate, and platelets as indicated (may require massive transfusion protocol)
- Immediate OB/GYN consultation
- Foley catheter for close monitoring of urine output
- Tocolysis is generally contraindicated
- If abruption is suspected in the setting of trauma, maternal stabilization is of primary importance:
- All indicated radiographs should be performed as needed
MEDICATION
First Line
- Rh-immunoglobulin in Rh-negative women:
- 300 μg IM in women at ≥12 wk gestation
- Higher doses if indicated by results of Kleihauer–Betke test
- Blood products as indicated
Second Line
Consider with obstetrician recommendation:
- Magnesium sulfate if tocolysis is indicated
- Steroids for fetal lung maturation if gestational age between 24 and 34 wk
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Patients with placental abruption must be admitted for maternal and fetal monitoring
- Admit to ICU if DIC, amniotic fluid embolism, or significant hemorrhage (known or suspected)
- Victims of multiple trauma with abruption should be admitted and managed in accordance with trauma protocols
- Transportation to higher trauma or obstetric level of care is appropriate if the patient is stable for transfer or appropriate care unavailable at existing facility
Discharge Criteria
- Trauma patients with no evidence of abruption or other significant injury may be discharged after 4–6 hr of normal maternal and fetal monitoring
- Discharge instructions include pelvic rest, no intercourse, no heavy lifting, no prolonged standing
- Discharge decision should be made in consultation with OB/GYN and include close follow-up
Issues for Referral
All cases of confirmed or suspected abruption require immediate obstetric consultation
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Primarily a clinical diagnosis: No single test reliably confirms or rules out placental abruption
- Hypotension typically occurs late in the course of hypovolemic shock in pregnancy
- Anticipate a consumptive coagulopathy and consider the need for blood products early in presentation
- Abruption may be associated with severe preeclampsia, causing a hypovolemic patient to be normotensive:
- Maintain a high index of suspicion for preeclampsia in patients with severe abruption and no obvious cause
ADDITIONAL READING
- Ananth CV, Kinzler WL. Placental abruption: Clinical features and diagnosis. In:
UpToDate
. Rose BD, ed. Waltham, MA: UpToDate; 2012.
- Ananth CV, Oyelese Y, Yeo L, et al. Placental abruption in the United States, 1979 through 2001: Temporal trends and potential determinants.
Am J Obstet Gynecol
. 2005;192:191–198.
- Elasser DA, Ananth CV, Prasad V, et al. Diagnosis of placental abruption: Relationship between clinical and histopathological findings.
Eur J Obstet Gynecol Repro Biol
. 2010;148:125–130.
- Kopelman TR, Berardoni NE, Manriquez M, et al. The ability of computed tomography to diagnose placental abruption in the trauma patient.
J Trauma Acute Care Surg
. 2013;74:236–241.
- Oyelese Y, Ananth CV. Placental abruption: Management. In:
UpToDate
. Rose BD, ed. Waltham, MA: UpToDate; 2012.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
- Placenta Previa
- Trauma in Pregnancy
- Vaginal Bleeding in Pregnancy
- DIC
CODES
ICD9
- 641.20 Premature separation of placenta, unspecified as to episode of care or not applicable
- 641.21 Premature separation of placenta, delivered, with or without mention of antepartum condition
- 641.23 Premature separation of placenta, antepartum condition or complication
ICD10
- O45.90 Premature separation of placenta, unsp, unsp trimester
- O45.91 Premature separation of placenta, unsp, first trimester
- O45.92 Premature separation of placenta, unsp, second trimester
PLACENTA PREVIA
Roneet Lev
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Placental tissue overlying or proximate to the internal cervical os
- Uterine enlargement and cervical dilation cause placental vessels near the cervix to tear, resulting in vaginal bleeding
- >90% of placenta previa diagnosed before 20 weeks will migrate and have normal placental location at term
- If placenta covers the internal os by >20 mm, then previa is expected at birth
- Increased amount of placental overlap (>15–23 mm) predicts placenta previa present at birth
- Causes 20% of all antepartum hemorrhage
- Classifications:
- Complete placenta previa: Cervical os is completely covered by placenta
- Partial placenta previa: Cervical os is partially covered by placenta
- Marginal placenta previa: Edge of placenta is at margin of cervical os
- Low-lying placenta: Placenta edge is within 2 cm to cervical os
ETIOLOGY
- Unknown etiology
- Incidence: 4/1,000 births = 0.4% of pregnancies at term
- Maternal mortality: 0.03%
- Perinatal morbidity and mortality: Triple, due to preterm delivery
- Factors affecting location of implantation:
- Increased number of curettages from spontaneous or induced abortions
- Abnormal endometrial vascularization
- Delayed ovulation
- Risk factors:
- Multiparity (5% grand multiparous patients vs. 0.2% nulliparous)
- Multiple gestation
- Prior C-section (up to 3× increase, increases with number or prior C-sections)
- Increased maternal age (0.7% age <19 yr, 1% age ≥35 yr)
- Previous placenta previa (4–8% recurrence)
- Smoking (2–4 times increase)
- Male fetus (14% increase)
- Assisted fertilization
- Residence at higher altitude
- Asian maternal race
- Unexplained elevated maternal serum alpha fetal protein (MSAFP)
- Associated conditions:
- Congenital anomalies
- Abnormal fetal presentation
- Preterm premature rupture of the membranes
- Amniotic fluid embolism; associated with pathologies of the placenta
- Vasa previa: Fetal vessels course through membranes and cover os
- Placenta accreta, increta, percreta (growth of placenta into uterine wall) occur in 5–10% of patients with placenta previa; sustained bleeding may require C-section hysterectomy
DIAGNOSIS