Abdominal pain in pregnancy: Difference between revisions

Line 19: Line 19:


==Disposition==
==Disposition==
Admit
*Ruptured ectopic pregnancy
*Active labor
*Preeclampsia/HELLP
*Placental abruption
*Uterine rupture
*Ovarian torsion
*Surgical abdomen


Discharge
*Ectopic pregnancy if hemodynamically stable with OB follow-up
*Spontaneous abortion if hemodynamically stable with adequate pain control


==See Also==
==See Also==

Revision as of 05:15, 8 October 2018

Background

  • Pregnant women are at risk for the same Abdominal Pathologies causing pain in all patients but also a few special issues.

Clinical Features

  • Abdominal pain in patient with positive pregnancy test

Differential Diagnosis

Abdominal Pain in Pregnancy

The same abdominal pain differential as non-pregnant patients, plus:

<20 Weeks

>20 Weeks

Any time

Evaluation

  • Must consider ectopic pregnancy in pregnant patient presenting with abdominal pain and no documented IUP
    • Quantitative beta hCG and pelvic US
  • Also consider beta hCG and pelvic US if concerned for spontaneous abortion
    • Consider pelvic exam to check for open cervical os, protruding products of conception
  • Urinalysis

Management

Disposition

Admit

  • Ruptured ectopic pregnancy
  • Active labor
  • Preeclampsia/HELLP
  • Placental abruption
  • Uterine rupture
  • Ovarian torsion
  • Surgical abdomen


Discharge

  • Ectopic pregnancy if hemodynamically stable with OB follow-up
  • Spontaneous abortion if hemodynamically stable with adequate pain control

See Also

External Links

References