11: Other medical complications Flashcards

1
Q

hyperemesis gravidarum is common in the setting of ?

A

molar pregnancies (likely since HCG levels can be very high) and a viable IUP should always be documented in patients with hyperemesis

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2
Q

First-line antiemetic therapy for hyperemesis

A

Phenergan, followed by addition of Reglan, Compazine, and Tigan. If these fail, droperidol and Zofran
Persistent N/V during pregnancy can also be treated with vitamin B6 and doxylamine (Unisom). Ginger and supplementation with vitamin B12

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3
Q

if patients will not respond to antiemetics and recurrent rehydration

A

tx with corticosteroids

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4
Q

normal physiologic changes of pregnancy

A

increased volume of distribution (VD) and increased hepatic metabolism of AEDs–>increased seizure frequency

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5
Q

what hormones affect seizures during pregnancy?

A

estrogen: epilieptogenic, decreasing seizure threshold
progesterone: anti epileptic effect (fewer seizures during luteal phase)

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6
Q

AEDs that are notorious for fetal malformations

A

phenytoin, phenobarbital, primidone, valproate, carbamazepine, and trimethadione

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7
Q

congenital abnormalities seen in infants born to epileptic moms on AEDs

A

4x increase in cleft lip/palate, 3-4x increase in cardiac anomalies, increase in NTDs (carbamezipine, valproic acid), higher rates of abnormal EEG findings, higher rates of developmentally delayed children, and lower IQ scores

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8
Q

genetic component leading to teratogenesis from AEDs

A

children whose enzyme activity of epoxide hydrolase is one-third less than normal have an increased rate of fetal hydantoin syndrome
-low epoxide hydrolase activity in children may increase risk of anomalies from carbamazepine

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9
Q

how to reduce teratogenesis of AEDs

A

switch to mono therapy, taper down dose, consider withdrawing if seizure free for 2-5 years

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10
Q

new AEDs that may have reduced risk of congenital anomalies

A

levetiracetam, lamotrigine, felbamate, topiramate, and oxcarbazepine

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11
Q

Management of Women with Epilepsy During Pregnancy

A

Check total and free levels of antiepileptic drugs on a monthly basis
Consider early genetic counseling
Check MSAFP
Level II ultrasound for fetal survey at 19 to 20 wks’ gestation (check face, CNS, and heart)
Consider amniocentesis for α-fetoprotein and acetylcholinesterase
Supplement with oral vitamin K 20 mg QD starting at 37 wks until delivery (optional)

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12
Q

the drug of choice in patients with a known seizure disorder is usually ? compared to magnesium used in preeclamptic patients

A

phenytoin

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13
Q

increased risk of spontaneous hemorrhage in newborns because of the inhibition of vitamin K–dependent clotting factors (i.e., II, VII, IX, X) secondary to ?

A

increased vitamin K metabolism and inhibition of placental transport of vitamin K by AEDs

  • overcome with aggressive supplementation with vitamin K toward the end of pregnancy (theoretical)
  • may need FFP
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14
Q

CV conditions causing high risk of maternal mortality in pregnancy

A

primary pulmonary hypertension, Eisenmenger physiology, severe mitral or aortic stenosis, and Marfan syndrome

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15
Q

SBE (subacute bacterial endocarditis) prophylaxis may be considered for women with ?

A

high-risk lesions (mechanical or prosthetic valves, unrepaired cyanotic lesions, etc.) and an infection that could cause bacteremia (chorioamnionitis or pyelonephritis).

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16
Q

care of women with congenital heart disease i.e. mitral/aortic stenosis

A
  • sx repair >1 year before becoming pregnant
  • offer termination of pregnancy as first line management
  • early epidural analgesia, vacuum/forceps assistance (minimizes cardiac stress)
  • monitor fluids carefully
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17
Q

postpartum period dangerous for woman with congenital heart disease, why?

A

massive fluid shifts

  1. IVC no longer compressed by uterus
  2. autotransfusion of blood supply (500cc) redirected from uterus that no longer needs it
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18
Q

among the most severe CV conditions in pregnancy:

A

right-to-left shunts and pulmonary hypertension

i.e. PDA, VSD due to Eisenmenger syndrome

19
Q
peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM)
how to manage?
A

specifically caused by pregnancy.
classic s/s of heart failure and on echocardiogram have a dilated heart with an ejection fraction far below normal in the 20% to 40% range.
-deliver if >34 wga
-manage with diuretics, digoxin, and vasodilators

20
Q

Chronic kidney disease classification

A

mild (Cr 2.8)

21
Q

CKD risks in pregnancy

A

preE, PTD, IUGR

-screen at least once per trimester with a 24-hour urine for creatinine clearance and protein

22
Q

consideration with post renal transplant patients

A

may be on immunosuppressants that have increased metabolism and Vd during pregnancy
i.e. cyclosporine, tacrolimus, prednisone, and Imuran

23
Q

why is pregnancy a hyper coagulable state

A
  • production of all clotting factors is increased except for II, V and IX
  • Turnover time for fibrinogen is also decreased during pregnancy and there are increased levels of fibrinopeptide A, which is cleaved from fibrinogen to make fibrin
24
Q

superficial vein thrombosis (SVT) how to treat?

A

warm compresses and analgesics but watch out for s/s of DVTs and PEs

25
Q

how to dx DVT

treatment?

A
  • often made clinically with confirmation by Doppler studies or venography (rarely used)
  • adjusted dose LMWH(enoxaparin 1 mg/kg BID) or unfractionated heparin (goal aPTT of 1.5 to 2.5 times normal).
26
Q

teratogenesis of warfarin

A

When given in the first trimester, it causes warfarin embryopathy, a combination of nasal hypoplasia and skeletal abnormalities.
-CNS abnormalities, including optic atrophy

27
Q

PE Cxray

A

chest X-ray may be entirely normal. However, when abnormal, two common signs on chest X-ray are the abrupt termination of a vessel as it is traced distally and an area of radiolucency in the region of lung beyond the PE

28
Q

PE dx for patients

A

most common: Spiral CT scan
Pulmonary angiography is the gold standard for diagnosis of PE: intraluminal filling defects or if sharp vessel cutoffs are seen

29
Q

PE tx

A

LMWH (IV heparin or streptokinase in a hypotensive/unstable pt)
enoxaparin
-tx for a minimum of 6 mos

30
Q

Management of thyroid disease changes in pregnancy ?

A

the Vd increases circulating thyroid binding globulin, and sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG), which also binds thyroid hormone.
-leads to decreased availability of thyroid hormone.

31
Q

management of TSH in pregnancy to prevent goiters in fetus

A

TSH should be kept between 0.5 and 2.5 in general population

in pregnancy, it should be kept closer to 0.5 than 2.5 if possible.

32
Q

all women on levothyroxine (Synthroid) supplementation should have their dose changed how?

A

increased from 25% to 30%.

-increase demand for thyroid hormone including increased VD, increased binding globulin (in particular, SHBG

33
Q

The natural history of SLE in pregnancy follows the one-third rule
med changes ?

A

1/3 improve, 1/3 worsen, and 1/3 remain unchanged

aspirin and corticosteroids are continued in pregnancy, whereas cyclophosphamide and methotrexate are NOT

34
Q

pathophys of early pregnancy loss in SLE pts

A

placental thrombosis

-mostly 1st/2nd, can happen in 3rd trimester as well, risk for IUGR, IUFD

35
Q

SLE tx

A

SQ heparin or Lovenox prophylaxis and low-dose aspirin

36
Q

lupus flare vs preE

why important to ddx?

A
  • lupus flare will have reduced C3 and C4 and are accompanied by active urine sediment
  • lupus tx with steroids/cyclophosphamide while preE is tx with delivery
37
Q

SLE patients (and more commonly Sjögren syndrome patients) can produce antibodies called anti-Ro (SSA) and anti-La (SSB) that do what?

A

are tissue-specific to the fetal cardiac conduction system, damage the AV node–>congenital heart block
-tx w. corticosteroids, plasmapheresis, and IVIG

38
Q

for alcohol withdrawal symptoms in pregnancy

A

use barbiturates not benzos (teratogenic)

39
Q

recommended caffeine intake in pregnancy

A

less than 150 mg

at risk for spontaneous abortions

40
Q

complications of smoking during pregnancy

A

spontaneous abortions, preterm births, abruptio placentae, and decreased birth weight, SIDS, respiratory illnesses

41
Q

complications of cocaine during pregnancy

A

abruptio placentae, IUGR, and an increased risk for preterm labor and delivery,CNS complications, including developmental

42
Q

risks of opioid use in pregnancy

A

opioid withdrawal may pose a greater risk to the fetus than chronic narcotic use. Risks of opiod withdrawal include miscarriage, preterm delivery, and fetal death.
-tx with Suboxone (buprenorphine) > methadone > quitting outright

43
Q

when babies born to opioid using mothers

A

Once infants are delivered, they require careful monitoring and slow withdrawal from their narcotic addiction using tincture of opium