OB midterm
Prenatal period: a time of physical and psychologic preparation for birth and parenthood
Duration of pregnancy: gestation
duration of pregnancy
Healthy People 2020 maternal goals
Top three risk factors ob
Paternal adaptation to pregnancy
three phases
uMaternal adaptation
Maternal Adaptation to pregnancy
three phases
3 parts to first prenatal visit
Follow up visits
Normal prenatal care = q month until 28 weeks, then q 2 months until 36 weeks, then every week until delivery.
nnormal prenatal care timeline
Immunizations: MMR, TdAP (3rd trimester), flu, pneumovax, varicella
iMMUNIZATIONS
C
1.With regard to follow-up visits and the physical examination for women receiving prenatal care, nurses should be aware that:
a.The interview portions become more intensive as the visits become more frequent over the course of the pregnancy.
b.Monthly visits are scheduled for the first trimester, every 2 weeks for the second trimester, and weekly for the third trimester.
c.During the abdominal examination, the nurse should be alert for supine hypotension.
d.For pregnant women, a systolic blood pressure (BP) of 130 mm Hg and a diastolic BP of 80 mm Hg is sufficient to be considered hypertensive
HOTN and less O2 to baby
What is supervena cavas syndrome
How to care for a variety of women in pregnancy
sex and pregooss
Travel beyond 34 – 35 weeks not condoned by airlines 2/2 risk of contractions from cabin pressure changes
cAN I TRAVEL BY AIRPLANE
What else to teach mom at visits
best at 1-13 weeks
When would mom get ultrasound to estimate date of delivery
1. A time of physical and psychologic preparation for birth and parenthood
2. Duration of pregnancy:
3.
Spans 9 calendar months, 10 lunar months
40 weeks or 280 days
Trimesters
First: weeks 1-13
Second: weeks 14-26
Third: weeks 27-40
1. Prenatal period definition:
2. Gestation definition:
3. Length of pregnancy/how many weeks in 1st 2nd and 3rd term?:
1. Suggested by the patient
- GI: Amenhorrea, nausea, vomiting, morning sickness
- Breast tenderness, need to pee, fatigue
- Quickening- feel the baby move at 16-20 weeks.
2. Probable: by examiner
- Pregnancy Test
- Uterine enlargement
- Braxton Hicks contractions
- Placental souffle
- Ballottement
3. Positive: Attributed to the FETUS
- Ultrasound
- Movement felt by someone else- third trimester
- Fetal heart beat distinct from mom
- Visualization of fetus
Signs and Symptoms of Pregnancy:
1. Presumptive
2. Probable
3. Positive
1. Take last menstural period
2. Substract 3 calender months
3. Add 7 days
4 This rule was founded by: Naegeles
5. Gold standard is ultrasound
Estimated Date of Birth/Delivery: how to calculate? And who came up w/ this calculation?
Also, what is the gold standard for finding date of birth?
1.
Initial visit
2. Physical assessment:
Prenatal period:
1. Initial interview items
Follow-up visits
Prenatal:
2. Follow up visits
Gravida: women who is pregnant
Terms:
1. Gravida
Gravity: the pregnancy
2. Gravity
Multigravida- women with more than 2 pregnancies
3. Mulitgravida
Multipara: women who has completed 2 or more pregnancies
Multipara
women who has never been pregnant
Nulligravida
Parity : number of pregnancies in which fetus or fetuses have reached VIABILITY (20 wks), NOT the number of fetuses born
Parity
Nullipara : woman who has not completed pregnancy with a fetus or fetuses who have reached the stage of fetal viability
Nullipara
Primipara : A woman who has completed one pregnancy with a fetus or fetuses who have reached 20 weeks of gestation
Primipara
Multipara : A woman who has completed two or more pregnancies to 20 weeks of gestation or more
Multipara:
Preterm : a pregnancy that has reached 20 weeks of gestation but ends before completion of 37 weeks of gestation
Preterm:
Late preterm : a pregnancy that has reached between 34 weeks 0 days and 36 weeks 6 days of gestation
Late preterm:
Early term : a pregnancy that has reached between 37 weeks 0 days and 38 weeks 6 days of gestation
Early Term:
Full term : a pregnancy that has reached between 39 weeks 0 days and 40 weeks 6 days of gestation
Full Term:
Late term : a pregnancy that has reached between 41 weeks 0 days and 41 weeks 6 days of gestation
Late term :
Post term : a pregnancy that has reached between 42 weeks 0 days and beyond of gestation
Post term:
2 digit system: G__ P__
G – Gravida
P - Parity
2 digit system used to identify the number of pregnancies
5 digit system: G__ T__ P__ A__ L__
G – Gravida
T – Term birth
P – Preterm birth
A – Abortions and Miscarriages
L – Living children
5 digit system
G- 3
T- 0
P-1
A- 1
L- 1
G- 4
T- 1
P- 0
A- 2
L-1
Uterus Changes in Pregnancy:
- What is hegar sign
- What are false contractions called
- What is bouncing of the baby in utero called
- what is quickening
Cervical changes in pregnanyc:
what is chadwhick versus goodell sign
Vagina and vulva
What is operculum
Breast changes
Slight hypertrophy:bigger heart: moves and rotates due to the fetus
pushing.
Blood pressure: same, but decreases in third
trimester
Blood volume and composition: increases significantly
during pregnancy by approximately 30% to 45%
Cardiac output:
increases
Circulation and coagulation times
Pregnancy is
considered a hypercoagulable state : @ risk for DVT
Pulse: Apical impulse shifts. 20 weeks, audible splitting of s12 and 3. Maternal hr begins increasing at wk 5 but increases by 10-15 by 32 week.
Cardiovascular changes
BP, blood flow, hr, coaguability?
Respiratory changes
Renal
- urine, ureters
malasma: darkened pigmentation- especially in dark skinned people
Linea nigra- from symphimas pubis to top of fundus.
Striae gravadrum. PUPPP: pruritic, uriticaric, plaques and papules of pregnancy. – red marks on ab.
-Musckuloskletal: relaxin hormones +progesterone relaxes bones, ribs are relaxed so you can fit the baby.
Pelvis- relactin makes it loser. Hip pain joint pain, waddleing.
Posture changes- lower back change. Walk straight. Belly band.
Carpel Tunnel
muskuloskeletal
Gastrointestinal system
Appetite- decreased
Mouth- raised
red bumps sometimes
Esophagus, stomach, and intestines: decreased
GI motility= constipation
Gallbladder and liver- distended
gallbladder, decreased muscle tone, increasted emtying and thick bile=
can cause gallstones. Liver sometimes retains bile= itching and
jaundice sometimes
Abdominal discomfort: Pyrosis (heartburn) (due
to LES loosening), Ptyalism (excessive salivation)
Appendicitis
can be difficult to diagnose in pregnancy because the appendix is
displaced upward and laterally
GI changes
GI, mouth, appetite, liver
Sonograms in pregnacy
induction in wmoen with previous scars
UTI
Change in hr in pregnancy
Anemia in pregnancy due to
Common antepartum complications
Diabetes Mellitis
Diabetes Mellitis classifications and types
Glucose changes in pregnnacy
Complicates 3% to 9% of all pregnancies
Fetal risks
Gestational Diabetes
Macrosemia vs. LGA
shoulder dystopia
macrosmia causes risk for...
-screening:
1. High risk: obesity, corticosteroids, hx of gdm in previous pregnancies, races AA, NA Asian
2. Screen:
-1 hour glucose testing test, glucola, sweet orange juice- draw one bloodwork or finger gluocse to see level- if over 130= positive
-Do between 24 and 28- if positive do a longer test, a fasting, 1hr, 2hr and 3hr.
-if before 20 weeks evaluated probably diabetes not GDM
Screening for gestational diabetes:
1. What makes them at high risk for GDM:
2. Screening
GDM care management: Antepartium
GDM Care: Intrapartum
GDM care: postpartum
Key points for diabetes in pregnancy
Hyperemesis Gravidarum
Assessment for HG
Initial Care for HG: can be done outpatient!
Key points for managing HG
B
Women with hyperemesis gravidarum:
a.Are a majority, because 80% of all pregnant women suffer from it at some time
b.Have vomiting severe and persistent enough to cause weight loss, dehydration, and electrolyte imbalance
c.Need IV fluid and nutrition for most of their pregnancy
d.Often inspire similar, milder symptoms in their male partners and mothers
Hypertensive Disorders: background and significance
Morbidity and Mortality due to HTN Disorders
1. Gestational HTN
2. Preeclampsia
3. Eclampsia
4. Chronic HTN
5. Chronic HTN w/ superimposed preeclampsia
Types/Classification of HTN disorders
Gestational HTN:
1. hypertensive
2. very concerned
Systolic over 140 or diastolic over 90 is ______________.
Systolic over 160 or diastolic over 110 is __________________.
Preeclampsia definition
What is a common feature of gestational HTN and preeclampsia?
common feature of gest. htn and preecclampsia
Chronic HTN and
Chronic HTN w/ superimposed preeclampsia
Preeclampsia etiology
Preeclampsia pathophysiology
Preeclampsia pathophysiology 2: what does this mean happens?
labs for preeclampsia
-Upper gastric is liver backing up!
What does Right upper gastric pain test in preeclampsia
retinal spasm and cortical brain spasm
What does Headache, blurred vision, swelling mean in preeclampsia
hands nad face
edema where is most important
Chart on what happens in preeclampsia and s&sypmtoms
Corticobrain spasm causes what three things?
Identifying and preventing preeclampsia
Assessment and Nurising Diagnoses for Preeclampsia
What is HELLP syndrome in preeclampsia
Interventions Preeclampsia mild
Interventions preeclampsia SEVERE
wHEN DO PREECLAMPSIA PT USUALLY HAVE THE BABY?
Consistent 160/110, organ compromise, or consistent elevated labs call for delivery regardless of whether 39 weeks has been reached.
When is delivery usually called for before 39 weeks
After 1st preeclampsia pregnancy will I have another, or HTN?
Key points preeclampsia
D
A client at 36 weeks of gestation presents to labor and delivery complaining of a constant headache for the past 2 days. She also states that her face “seems more swollen than usual.” What should be the nurse’s first action?
a.Obtain a urine sample.
b.Place the client on a fetal heart monitor.
c.Notify the physician of the client’s concerns.
d.Take the client’s blood pressure.
try to keep baby in for 34 weeks to allow for lung maturation and ensure baby will be able to breathe on its own once born.
Give betamethasone in case delivery before 34 weeks is required.
why do we want a babe to make it to 34 wks
what do we give then if required delivery
Antepartal Hemorragic Disorders: why are they a big deal and what are people at risk for?
Fetal risks from maternal hemmorage
Early Pregnancy Bleeding usually results in this
-Threatened: bleed a little, still viable. Do sonogram-check fetal heart
-Inevitable: mom bleeding heavier, expelling everything- provide supportive measures.
-Incomplete: tissue comes out, rather than formed fetus. Blood tissue clots- expel some of it, but some still stuck inside- intervene, send for scraping and vaccuuming.
-Complete- everything comes out. No more disconfort- severe cramping, getsrid of everything, uterus stops crampong.
-Missed- no bleeding, but no heart beat. Abortion. 3 fold treatment: expectant – let the body do it itself. 2nd is medical intervention = misoprostil- use for inducing missed miscarriage.
-Recurrent: probably need sto go to reproductive med. 3 is a lot of babys to lose. >35 needs to go to see a specialist.
-Recurrent-
Types of miscarriages and what they mean
Miscarriage Management
1.Abdominal pain
2.Delayed menses
3.Abnormal vaginal bleeding (spotting)
What is an ectopic Pregnancy
incidence and etiology
clinical manifestations
-ectopicà lifethreatening. Instead of imbedding into the uterus, it is imbedded into follopian tubes. May rupture! ED
- PAIN! One sided pain not general cramping.
-Ectopic severe pain on the tube side.
-Sonogram to determine where it is.
-Ectopicàgive meds to abort.
More on ectopic pregnancies, what do you do
Late Pregnancy bleeding:
Placenta Previa
placenta previa
incidence
manifestations
maternal fetal outcomes
placenta previa: diagnoses and care management
Maternal hypertension is a primary risk factor
Placental Abruption, premature
Risk factors?
Placental Abruptions:
manifestations
diagnoses
key points hemmoragic disorders
Passenger: fetus
Size of the fetal head
Bones in the fetal skull
Fontanels
Molding
Presentation of the fetus: the part of the fetus that enters the pelvic inlet first and leads through the birth canal during labor
Cephalic
Breech
Shoulder
What is the passenger during labor?
- what is important in the passenger
What is the presentation?
Passenger: Hardest part is head, which needs to maneuver and come out first.
Majority come out head first.
Should be in cephalic position by 37 weeks (term) baby is big, and cant maneuver.
Will do an external rotation if not in cephalic at 37 weeks. Decreases csection rates.
Cephalic- head down
Breech- sacrum down
Scapula- shoulder
Transverese
Fetal head: not completely fused, even though they have bones- don’t fuse till 18 montsh of age. helps with birth because still moveable. Biparietal diameter is the largest piece to get through thte pelvis.
More to do with the passenger:
What is the hardest part of passenger to come through? Why can this part come through okay?
When should they lie in a cephalic position by? and why?
What do they do if the baby is not cephalic?
What does cephalic mean?
What does breech mean?
What does scapula mean
Transverse??
Fetal position : the relationship of a reference point on the presenting part to the four quadrants of the mother’s pelvis
Position is denoted by a three-part letter abbreviation
Vertex= cephalic/head first.
-Roa and loa are most common
-ROA- has to do with the bone.
-Put heart rate monitor on back .
-ROT-
-ROP, LOP- posterior.
-Transvere and posterior tak e a little longer and it is more uncomfortable.
Fetal position means:
What is cephalic
Vertex?
ROA?
LOA?
Rot/Lot
Rop//Lot
Fetal lie : the relation of the long axis (spine) of the fetus to the long axis (spine) of the mother
Longitudinal/
Vertical
Fetal lie- in relation to long axis of spine in baby and mom
- longitudinal/vertical is straight up and down in relationship to mom spine
- transverse is horizontal
Fetal attitude : the relation of the fetal body parts to one another
General flexion
Factors affecting the labor of the passenger:
Fetal lie
vs
Fetal attitude
Fetal position : the relationship of a reference point on the presenting part to the four quadrants of the mother’s pelvis
Position is denoted by a three-part letter abbreviation
Fetal station : a measure of the degree of descent of the presenting part of the fetus through the birth canal
Fetal engagement : usually corresponds to 0 station
*-Ischial spines is important landmark- most narrow diameter that baby needs to go through, talking about station that is the point of reference. O statioin is ischial spines. Anything above is negative. Anything below it is positive.
-+4 you usually can see the head.
Fetal position
Fetal Station
Fetal Engagement
What landmark do we use to measure these?
Passageway: Birth canal
2 openings, goes into inlet, comes out the outlet (spines, tuberosities and arch)
What is the passageway
Powers
Primary powers: contractions
Frequency, duration, intensity
Effacement
Dilation
Secondary powers: bearing-down efforts
Valsalva maneuver
Laboring Down
Powers during labor:
primary vs secondary and what effects both of these powers
Position of laboring woman
Discussed in depth in Chapter 19
Psychologic state of laboring woman
Discussed in depth in Chapter 19
Positition and psychologic state of pt affecting labor
Thinning-->dilation-->decent of fetus
The process of labor begins w/ something in the cervix happening? What comes first
Mechanism of labor
Turns and adjustments necessary in human birth process
Seven cardinal movements of mechanism of labor
1.Engagement
2.Descent
3.Flexion
4.Internal rotation
5.Extension
6.Restitution and external rotation
7.Expulsion
How the fetus comes through in labor
Mechanism of labor
THIS ISIMPORTANT
Seven cardinal movements
1.Engage: goes through internal inlet.
2.Descent – move down.
(0 station is engaged and descended
3. Pelvic muscle flexes neck
4. internally rotaiton of head to get out of bony pelvic outlet
5. Extension of head to say hell
6. Restitution and aligns head with shoulders, head moves back
7. expulsion- baby pops out.
Each cardinal movement explained
cardinal again
The first stage of labor lasts from the time dilation begins to the time when the cervix is fully dilated.
The second stage of labor lasts from the time of full cervical dilation to the birth of the infant. (even if she is laboring down)
The third stage of labor lasts from the infant’s birth to the expulsion of the placenta.
The fourth stage of labor begins with the delivery of the placenta and includes at least the first 2 hours after birth. (q15 monitoring)
Four stages of labor: know these
Labor and birth are affected by the five Ps: passenger, passageway, powers, position of the woman, and psychologic response.
5 ps of pregnancy
Physiologic factors
Culture
Anxiety
Previous experience
Gate-control theory of pain
Comfort
Support
Environment
factors affecting pain response in laboring women
Childbirth preparation methods
Relaxing and breathing techniques
Focusing and relaxation
Breathing techniques
Effleurage and counterpressure
Touch and massage
Therapeutic touch
Application of heat and cold
Non pharmacologic pain measures
Acupressure and acupuncture
Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation
Water therapy (hydrotherapy)
Intradermal water block
Aromatherapy
Music
Hypnosis
Biofeedback
non pharmaco pain methods
Anesthesia encompasses analgesia, amnesia, and relaxation
Analgesia : the alleviation of the sensation of pain or the raising of the threshold for pain perception without loss of consciousness
The type of analgesic or anesthetic chosen is determined in part by the stage of labor of the woman and by the method of birth planned.
FENTANYL GREAT
Pharm pain methods: anaelgesia vvs. anesthesia
Systemic analgesia
Nerve block analgesia and anesthesia
Epidural anesthesia or analgesia (block): currently the most effective pharmacologic pain relief method for labor
Combined spinal-epidural (CSE) analgesia: sometimes referred to as a “walking epidural,” although women often choose not to walk because of sedation and fatigue, abnormal sensations in and weakness of the legs, and a feeling of insecurity
Epidural and intrathecal (spinal) opioids
Two types of anesthesia
General informed consent
Informed consent for anesthesia
Timing of administration
Preparation for procedures
Administration of medication
Intravenous route
Intramuscular route
Regional (epidural or spinal) anesthesia
Safety and general care
Nursing guidelines for pharm therapies
Sedatives may be appropriate for women in prolonged early labor when there is a need to decrease anxiety or promote sleep or therapeutic rest.
Naloxone (Narcan) is an opioid (narcotic) antagonist that can reverse narcotic effects, especially respiratory depression.
Pharmacologic control of pain during labor requires collaboration among the health care providers and the laboring woman.
When are sedatives a good idead?
What is narcan used for
Epidural anesthesia and analgesia are the most effective available pharmacologic pain relief methods for labor.
General anesthesia is rarely used for vaginal birth but may be used for cesarean birth or whenever rapid anesthesia is needed in an emergency childbirth situation.
use of an epidural vs general
bp down
hr up in mom
hr down in baby
W/ anesthesia: what happens to moms bp, moms hr, and babies hr
Intermittent auscultation :
Listening to fetal heart sounds at
periodic intervals to assess FHR
Easy to use, inexpensive, less
invasive than EFM
Difficult to perform on women who are
obese
Does not provide a permanent record
Electronic fetal
monitoring:
External monitoring
Ultrasound transducer
Toco transducer (tocodynamometer)
Different fetal monitoring techniques
Electronic fetal monitoring (Cont.):
Internal
monitoring
Spiral electrode
Intrauterine pressure catheter
(IUPC) -->can insert fluid through this!
Display: displayed on
the monitor paper or computer screen, with the FHR in the upper
section and UA in the lower section
Electronic fetal monitoring techniques:
Baseline fetal heart rate
Fetal HR patterns:
What is baseline HR?
uVariability
uDescribed as irregular waves or fluctuations in the baseline FHR of two cycles per minute or greater
u4 possible categories of variability:
uAbsence
uMinimal
uModerate
uMarked
What is variabilitiy
Normal baby- hr fluctuates.
A- absent fluctuations, CONCERNED!
B: minimal variability- less than 5 bpm change in fluctuation
C- 6-25 bpm fluctuations- moderate variability
D- Marked-active baby!
Dark blue lines a minute
Little squares are 10 seconds
Variability patterns:
Rare event= IN TROUBLE . Fetal anemia- moms blood type doesn’t match, rh- and +
Another rare finding
Bradycardia= <110.
Tahy= >160
Fetaal tachycardia and bradycardia levels
Changes in FHR (Cont.):
Decelerations:
Early
decelerations in response to fetal head compression (mirrors
contractions, head is hitting pelvic floor, compressing cerebral blood
flow. NORMAL
Late decelerations due to
uteroplacental insufficiency-
WORRY- due to blood flow insufficiency: contraction happens, decel happens after the contraction.
Variable decelerations due to umbilical cord compression
NOT variability, is due to umbilical cord compression. No pattern to variable decels. V for variable- SHARP dip. Baby may be leaning on cord, need to turn mom off of that cord.
Prolonged decelerations:;
lasting longer, 2 minutes, 5 minutes,2-10min is polonnged, tryin to get her to move, get it to get back up.
Change in fetal HR : what is a deceleration
what is acceleration
uCategory I: normal
uCategory II: indeterminate
uCategory III: abnormal
Categories for fetal hr's
uBaseline FHR in the normal range of 110-160 beats/min
uBaseline fetal heart rate variability: moderate
uLate or variable decelerations: absent
uEarly decelerations: may be present or absent
uAccelerations: either present or absent
Category I
uBradycardia not accompanied by absence of baseline variability
uTachycardia
uMinimal or absence of baseline variability not accompanied by recurrent decelerations
uMarked baseline variability
uNo accelerations in response to fetal stimulation
uPeriodic or episodic decelerations
Category II
uNonreassuring FHR patterns associated with fetal hypoxemia
uHypoxemia can deteriorate to severe fetal hypoxia
uAbsence of baseline variability
uRecurrent or late decelerations
uBradycardia
uSinusoidal pattern
Category III
The five essential components of the FHR tracing that must be evaluated regularly are baseline rate, baseline variability, accelerations, decelerations, and changes or trends over time.
5 Essential parts to a fetal HR
If any component is abnormal, corrective measures must be taken immediately to improve fetal oxygenation: intrauterine resuscitation
Supplemental oxygen
Maternal position changes
Increasing intravenous fluids
Components of Intrauterine resuscitation
D, document
this is a normal finding!
1.While evaluating an external monitor tracing of a woman in active labor whose labor is being induced, the nurse notes that the fetal heart rate (FHR) begins to decelerate at the onset of several contractions and returns to baseline before each contraction ends. The nurse should:
a.Change the woman’s position
b.Discontinue the oxytocin infusion
c.Insert an internal monitor
d.Document the finding in the client’s record