Injuries in pregnancy

  • All injured women of childbearing age are considered pregnant until proven otherwise

  • Be aware that pregnancy may trigger or increase domestic/family violence — if suspected make sure woman is safe and refer her to support services
  • Best thing for baby is to take good care of mother — always assess and resuscitate woman first then assess baby

  • Be aware of mandatory reporting requirements in your state/territory

Abdominal injury in pregnancy

  • Any abdominal injury in pregnancy can be serious
  • Usual signs of abdominal injury are not reliable — soft, non-tender abdomen does not rule out serious injury
  • Placental abruption can happen even after a minor abdominal injury
  • In late pregnancy baby can be directly injured — foetal distress may not be obvious until hours after injury

Do not

  • Do not do vaginal exam unless skilled and asked to by doctor

Do first

See Assessing trauma — primary and secondary survey — initial priorities same as for any injured person

Important extra points about Airway, Breathing, Circulation in pregnancy

A — Airway

  • Increased risk that women will vomit and aspirate (get vomit in lungs)
  • If airway or intubation needed — always put in nasogastric or orogastric tube as well

B — Breathing

  • Give oxygen to target O2 sats 94–98% 

C — Circulation

  • Position woman on left side with uterus pushed over to left — after 20 weeks pregnant the uterus presses on major blood vessels if woman lies flat on back — may cause low BP, foetal distress
  • Control obvious external bleeding for transport and assessment
  • If spinal injury suspected — immobilise then tilt spinal board 15–30° to the left by putting wedge or rolled-up blanket under it
  • If positioning on left side or lateral tilt not possible
    • Place rolled up towel under right hip to tilt uterus to the left side
    • Use manual displacement of uterus — stand on woman’s left, put both hands around pregnant abdomen and pull abdomen toward yourself

Any change indicating shock is very serious.

  • Detecting shock is difficult — pregnant woman can lose up to 1,200–1,500mL of blood before any changes in pulse or BP 
  • Signs of shock
    • Increased RR
    • Pulse weak and fast (more than 100bpm) or difficult to feel
    • Central capillary refill longer than 2 seconds
    • Pale, cool, moist skin
    • Restless, confused, drowsy, occasionally unconscious
    • Low BP for age or relative to person's previously recorded values
  • Put in IV cannula — largest possible, insert 2 if time
  • If shock suspected — give 1L normal saline or Hartmann's solution as fast as possible, even if BP normal
  • Further IV fluids — medical consult

At end of trauma assessment — must do medical consult even if injury seems minor

Ask

  • Exactly how injury occurred
    • A complete history will help you work out likelihood of serious injury
    • In motor accidents ask specifically about type and position of seat belt
  • Pain, contractions, baby movements
  • How many weeks pregnant, due date for birth, obstetric ultrasound report
  • Vaginal fluid loss, bleeding
  • Is woman RhD negative

Check

  • Calculate REWS — AVPU, RR, O2 sats, pulse, BP, Temp
  • Weight, BGL 
  •  U/A
  • Head-to-toe exam – with attention to
    • Abdomen – shape, bruising, surgical scars. Feel for tenderness, rigidity, guarding
    • Uterus and baby – feel if soft or hard, for tenderness or contractions, assess position of baby
    • Vulva and perineum – look for blood or fluid coming from vagina or urethra – note colour, amount, smell
  • POC Test — Hb

Do

  • Medical consult
  • If results not known take blood for FBC, blood group, antibodies and Kleihauer test (test for amount of foetal blood in maternal circulation) 
  • If abdominal injury and mother RhD negative with no Anti-D antibodies — woman will need RhD-Ig IM
    • Under 12 weeks pregnant and miscarriage or painful vaginal bleeding — 250IU
    • Over 12 weeks pregnant — 625IU
    • Over 20 weeks pregnant — start with 625IU. Kleihauer test results will determine if more needed