Miscarriage ( abortion Early pregnancy loss Dr. R. EL-Gantri Associated Professor Obst. & Gyne. Department.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
J WAHBA, N GARG, A KOTHARI Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, Hillingdon Hospital, London, United Kingdom Introduction One to 2% of all pregnancies.
Advertisements

Dr.Suresh Babu Chaduvula Professor Dept. of OBGyn, College of Medicine, KKU, Abha, KSA.
Bleeding in Early and Late Pregnancy
Guidelines for Treating Acute GYN Illnesses
EARLY PREGNANCY PAIN AND BLEEDING
Basic Facts on Birth Defects
Assistant Professor & Consultant Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology
Bleeding in early pregnancy Dr. Abdalla H. Alsadig MD.
Ectopic pregnancy: Definition: Any pregnancy accruing outside the uterine cavity incidence 1/100 one cause of maternal death.
Bleeding causes in the first trimester pregnancy
Abortion Abortion is the spontaneous or induced (therapeutic) expulsion of the products of conception from the uterus before 20 weeks gestation At least.
DR. JOHARA AL-MUTAWA ASST. PROF. & CONSULTANT OB/GYNE.
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR IOLANDA BLIDARU
Unsafe Abortion Post Abortion Care and Ectopic Pregnancy.
RECURRENT MISCARRIAGE GUIDELINES
Early Fetal Wastage “ Miscarriage” Professor Hassan Nasrat.
Lecture 8 ECTOPIC PREGNANCY. ABORTION Prof. Vlad TICA, MD, PhD.
MEDICAL MANAGEMENT OF ECTOPIC PREGNANCY
Miscarriage, Abortion and ectopic pregnancy
Abortion (miscarriage)
In normal pregnancy, the cervix remain closed and retains the product of conception with in uterus. In normal pregnancy, the cervix remain closed.
Abortion 流产.
Puntland Medical Association PMA نقابة أطباء بونتلاند HQ: Garowe tell:
Vaginal Bleeding in Early Pregnancy Dr Dalya Alhamdan Consultant Ob/ Gyn Salmaniya Medical Complex.
Bleeding in Early Pregnancy
Pain and Bleeding in Early Pregnancy Max Brinsmead MB BS PhD February 2015.
Breeding Trouble Early Complications & Diabetes Jennifer K. McDonald.
Placenta Abruption (abruptio placentae)
Placenta previa Placental abruption
Induced abortion. -named pregnancy termination. -named pregnancy termination. -two doctor at least should decide induced abortion when these are greater.
Gestational Trophoblastic Disease Max Brinsmead MB BS PhD March 2015.
RECURRENT MISCARRIAGE & SEPTIC ABORTION DR. ROBINA TARIQ Associate PROF. OBS / GYNAE SERVICES INSTITUTE OF MEDICAL SCIENCES /
Placenta Previa Liu Wei Department of Ob & Gy Ren Ji hospital.
Miscarriage Early pregnancy loss
Abnormal Pregnancy Time Limit and Ectopic Pregnancy
ABORTIONS. Definition Termination of pregnancy before the period of viability.
Early Pregnancy Loss and Ectopic Pregnancy
Chapter 20 When There’s a Problem. Early Miscarriage The spontaneous expulsion of an embryo or fetus from the uterus before it is able to live on the.
Spontaneous Abortion Vandana Sharma, M.D April 30, 2004.
A BORTION & C ARE OF A BORTED F ETUS. OBJECTIVES Definitions.
Abortion (miscarriage) طیبه غریبی عضو هیئت علمی دانشکده پرستاری و مامایی.
Antepartum Hemorrhage Family Medicine Specialist CME University of Health Sciences.
Objectives:  At the end of this lecture, the student should:  Know the main categories of bleeding in early pregnancy.  Can clinically assess a woman.
Maternal Health at the District Hospital Family Medicine Specialist CME Oct , 2012 Pakse.
Trophoblastic disease -This is a group of disorders characterized by -This is a group of disorders characterized by 1-abnormal placental development. 1-abnormal.
ABORTION Razieh M. Jaafari, MD Dept of ObGyn Ahwaz University of Med. Science.
Other problems in early pregnancy Inelastic cervix.
1 Clinical aspects of Maternal and Child nursing Intrapartum complications.
Dr. Madhavi Karki. DEFINITION However for international acceptance it is brought down to 20 th weeks or fetus weighing 500gm.
If continuation of pregnancy carry risk to patient life or if the pregnancy continue there substantial risk that the child born with severe abnormalities.
Miscarriageand Ectopic Pregnancy. Definition The expulsion or extraction of an fetus less then 500 gr OR Pregnancy Loss before 20 weeks gestation.
Miscarriage By Gabriela Polanco.
Gestational Trophoblastic Disease for Undergraduates
definition A process of expulsion or extraction of embryo / fetus from womb before it reaches to viability period (or less than 500gm in weight), is called.
Second trimester miscrriage
Spontaneous abortion Objectives:
2nd trimester Miscarraige
Dr. Afraa Mahjoob Al-Naddawi
Carcinoma of the cervix
Recurrent Miscarriage
UTERUS.
Intrauterine Fetal Death
Induced abortion : If continuation of pregnancy carry risk to patient life or if the pregnancy continue there substantial risk that the child born with.
King Khalid University Hospital Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology
Cervical Incompetence
Carcinoma of the cervix
Pregnancy at Risk: Pregnancy-Related Complications
Ectopic pregnancy: Definition: Any pregnancy accruing outside the uterine cavity incidence 1/100 one cause of maternal death.
Pregnancy at Risk: Gestational Conditions
Presentation transcript:

Miscarriage ( abortion Early pregnancy loss Dr. R. EL-Gantri Associated Professor Obst. & Gyne. Department

Definition: Spontaneous termination of pregnancy before viability of fetus ( before 24 week gestation). Incidence: 15% Early pregnancy loss: if it occurs before 12 weeks (80%) Late pregnancy loss: if it occurs between 13 to 24 weeks (12%) ( usually there is a fetus)

Early pregnancy loss classified into; * Blighted ova: no fetus on U/S examination (Empty gestational sac) Fetal tissues absent on histological examination * Early fetal demise: fetus present on U/S examination fetal tissues present on histological examination Factors influence rate of spontaneous miscarriage: Maternal age > 35 years Gravidity Previous miscarriage Multiple pregnancies

Etiology: 1.Abnormal conceptus as genetic abnormalities (50-60%), structural abnormalities 2.Endocrine abnormalities (10- 15%) 3.Cervical incompetence (8-10%) 4.Uterine anatomic abnormalities (1-3%) 5.Immunological (5%) 6.Infections (3-5%) 7.Structural abnormalities 8.Unknown reasons (< 5%)

1- abnormal conceptus Blighted ovum means an empty gestational sac without embryo development. Most miscarriage occurs before 8 weeks’ gestations and are blighted ovum and result from: error in maternal and/ or paternal meiosis super fecundation of an egg by two sperms chromosomal division without cytoplasmic division

The abnormalities of development may be due to: Chromosomal abnormalities Structural abnormalities Gene defects (absence of specific enzyme) I- The chromosomal abnormalities; Are found in approximately 80% of blighted ovum and 5-10% of the miscarriage in which the a fetus is present. These are the most frequent and important causes of early pregnancy loss

The chromosomal abnormalities include; ♣ autosomal trisomy; The non-disjunction defect is found approximately in 60% of blighted ovum with abnormal karyotypes. most non-disjunction occurs during 1 st mitotic division The affected chromosomes are: 16 (32%) 22 (10%) 21 (8%) ♣ Triploidy ; occurs in 12-15% of chromosomal abnormalities double paternal chromosomes (69 chromosomes) partial molar of pregnancy occurs in 5% ♣ Monosomy X; represents 25% of miscarriage with chromosomal abnormalities (45X)

♣ Structural rearrangement; the abnormality consists of unbalanced translocation accounts 3-5% of miscarriage with abnormal chromosome 3% of couples will be carrier karyotyping is required II- structural abnormalities as NTD, uncommon cause of miscarriage III- Gene defect; -difficult to determine because of facilities to identify the individual gene defects. -Example as autosomal dominant disorders and X-linked dominant disorders.

II- Endocrine causes *Corpus luteum is essential for maintenance of pregnancy during the first 8 weeks. * Surgical removal of it → miscarriage within 4- 7 days * Parenteral progesterone may prevent abortion but the evidence of progesterone deficiency as a cause of miscarriage is unsatisfactory. * In the past, progesterone have been used among women with recurrent miscarriage with good results. * It is possible that corpus luteum deficiency could be a cause of early pregnancy loss * Use pf progesterone is over used in miscarriage.

III-Uterine abnormalities A- Uterine malformations; - result from a failure of normal fusion of the Mullerian ducts, as: bicronuate uterus, septate or subseptate, and uterus didelphys. - May result in miscarriage in % B- Intra-uterine synechiae ( Asher man's syndrome) in which there is either partial or complete adhesion between walls of uterus leading to partial or complete obliteration of the uterine cavity. Usually occur as a result of intrauterine infections following; Retained parts of conception post-abortal or postpartum curettage repeated pregnancy loss

C- Cervical incompetence ▲ Is a well recognized cause of miscarriage in late second trimester ▲ The clinical feature are: - painless cervical dilatation (main presentation) - increase vaginal discharge - speculum examination shows bulging membrane with cervical dilatation ▲Causes; Trauma to cervix is the main etiological factor - vigorous mechanical dilatation of cervix - trauma during delivery - cone biopsy - cervical amputation Congenital; rare

▲ Diagnosis of cervical incompetence 1- History and examination 2- During pregnancy: U/s examination Finding: short cervix internal os dilated up to ≥ 2cm funnel shaped cervix 3- Non pregnancy: passing Hegar dilator number 8 through internal os hysterosalpingography

▲ Treatment Placing suture ( cervical cerclage) around the cervix at week’s gestation Two types of sutures; McDonald Shrodkar ▲ Complications of cerclage - Rupture of membrane - Infections - further trauma to cervix ▲ Time of removal of cerclage at 38 weeks

D- Infection ◙ uncommon cause of miscarriage ◙ acute maternal infections as ; peyelitis, appendicitis can lead to general toxic illness with high temperature that stimulates the uterine activity → miscarriage. ◙ early diagnosis & treatment will control most of infection and forestall the occurrence of miscarriage ◙ syphilis can cross the placenta → IUFD and miscarriage ◙ other infections as; Rubella, Toxoplasmosis, Listeriosis, CMV, and Mycoplasma can lead to miscarriage

E- Immunological causes Immunological rejection of fetus can cause recurrent miscarriage May be due to failure of the normal immune response in mother An example is anti-phospholipids antibody syndrome responsible for 3-5% of recurrent miscarriage F- toxic factors Anesthetic gases, smoking, alcohol, and drug abuse can cause miscarriage G- Trauma amniocentesis, CVS, IUCDs, and abdominal surgery

Types of miscarriage 1- Threatened miscarriage Referred as vaginal bleeding before 24 week’s gestation when there is a viable fetus without evidence of cervical dilatation and pain. 2- Inevitable, if the cervix becomes dilated, the bleeding increases and there is pain. 3- Incomplete, if there is partial expulsion of product of product of conception ( usually the fetus) with retention of some parts ( usually placenta). 4- Complete, complete expulsion of product of conception. 5- Missed miscarriage, the embryo dies in utero but is not passed 6 Septic, infection may occur following any type of abortion and may spread to pelvis or even leads to septicemia.

7- Recurrent miscarriage, referred as three or more consecutive abortion Clinical features of miscarriage 1- Threatened miscarriage - vaginal bleeding (usually slight) - slight abdominal cramps - internal os is closed - viable fetus on U/S examination 2- Inevitable miscarriage - bleeding becomes heavy with clots - lower abdominal pain - cervix dilated ± bulging membrane

3- Incomplete miscarriage - heavy vaginal bleeding may lead to hypo-volaemic shock - lower abdominal pain some times sever - history of passing something (POC) - cervix dilated - Retained parts of conception on U/S examination 4- Complete miscarriage - bleeding minimal - no pain - cervix closed - empty uterus on U/S examination

Differential diagnosis Ectopic pregnancy Hydatiform mole ( molar pregnancy) Local causes as; cervical erosion, cervical polyp, etc. Clinical assessment A- History; includes personal history complains as; vaginal bleeding, pain GA Nigel's rule medical history

B- Examination * General assessment for any signs of shock * Abdominal examination for: abdominal tenderness size of uterus large wrong date multiple pregnancy molar pregnancy fibroids smaller wrong date non- viable fetus

* Pelvic examination Should be carried out in all cases If the vaginal bleeding is slight → speculum examination for - any vaginal infection - cervical lesion If the bleeding is heavy → digital examination to assess - cervical tenderness ? Ectopic - state of cervix - any POC felt inside cervix ↓ to be removed manually ↓ relieve pain & decrease bleeding

C- Investigation Serum B-HCG may be required to confirm pregnancy Ultra-sound examination Abdominal U/S GS will be seen normally if SBHCG ≥ 3000mIU/ml Trans-vaginal ; more accurate GS will be seen normally if SBHCG ≥ 1000mIU/ml NB; if fetal heart seen on U/S examination, pregnancy will continue in 98%.

Management 1- Threatened miscarriage - Reassurance of patients - Rest for few days until the bleeding has settled down - may require progesterone supplementation - folic acid anti D if RH negative 2- Incomplete miscarriage - assessment of general condition - blood sample for blood group, RH factor, and CBC - removal of POC if felt in cervical canal - ergometrine 0.5mg IV or IM to ↓ blood loss

- evacuation of uterus UGA followed by gentle curettage - ergometrine 0.5mg IV will encourage uterine contraction -anti D if RH negative - if there is hypo-volaemic shock, may require blood transfusion Septic miscarriage Occurs as a result of ascending infection following miscarriage. If not treated, infection may spread throughout pelvis → septicemia and septic shock Signs; pyrexia abdominal pain, and tenderness persistent vaginal bleeding offensive vaginal discharge

Investigation Routine basic investigations as BL. Group, RH factor, CBC, BS, urea & electrolytes, etc Cervical swab U/S examination for retained parts Treatment -Iv. Broad spectrum antibiotic -IV fluids ± blood transfusion if needed -Analgesia -Evacuation of uterus -Anti D

Complications of septic miscarriage Septicemia, and septic shock Acute renal failure Chronic pelvic infection Infertility Missed miscarriage clinical features: - Disappearance of symptoms of pregnancy -Size of uterus < duration of gestation - U/S shows no signs of fetal life -PT will remains positive as long as the placental tissues survive then → -ve Treatment: there is no urgency in treating missed miscarriage because: spontaneous miscarriage mostly occurs coagulation defects due to dead fetus syndrome are rare

Many women prefer to have pregnancy termination If pregnancy less than 12 weeks; termination by suction curettage mifepristone ( anti-progesterone) If pregnancy > 12 weeks, termination by induction of labor with prostaglandin (extra-amniotic) mifepristone

Recurrent miscarriage Management includes: 1-Careful history and examination 2- trans-vaginal U/S 3- HSG and/or hysteroscopy 4- karyotyping 5-blood tests for infections 6- antiphospholipid antibodies Treatment according to the cause

Induced abortion Induced abortion is not considered in medical terms alone but it arouses strong personal emotions and involves religious and ethical considerations. Indications; termination of pregnancy may be medically indicated to safe life of patients as in: malignant diseases of cervix, breast and sever cardiac disease. Also fetal malformation may require termination.

Q question 1- what is miscarriage and the types? 2- how to diagnose different types of miscarriage ? 3 what are the complications ? How to treat patient ?

Good luck