Septic abortion
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Background
- Spontaneous or induced abortion that is complicated by a pelvic infection[1]*Endometritis (2/2 retained products of conception or using non-sterile instruments)
- Usually a polymicrobial infection[3]
- E. Coli, Streptococcus, anaerobes (Bacteroides), sexually transmitted pathogens
- Clostridium perfringens is associated with a higher mortality
- Tetanus, especially in developing nations and if nonsterile instrumentation is the cause
Risk Factors
- Non Sterile abortions
- Advanced gestational age
Epidemiology
- Huge cause of maternal mortality worldwide
- Estimated 20 million unsafe abortions performed worldwide every year; 40% done on women ages 15-24[4]
- WHO estimates 68,000 women die every year from unsafe abortions, with septic abortion being the #1 cause of death
- Overall mortality: 20-50%
- Mortality rare in US (1 in 100,000 abortions)
Clinical Features
- Abdominal or pelvic pain
- Nausea/Vomitting
- Vaginal bleeding
- Vaginal discharge
- Cervical motion tenderness
- Hypotension, tachycardia, fever, tachypnea
- History of recent pregnancy or known induced or spontaneous abortion
- Usually delayed presentation (48 hours after onset of symptoms) secondary to the stigma of induced abortion
Differential Diagnosis
Abdominal Pain in Pregnancy
Abdominal Pain in Pregnancy
The same abdominal pain differential as non-pregnant patients, plus:
<20 Weeks
- Ectopic pregnancy
- First trimester abortion
- Complete abortion
- Threatened abortion
- Inevitable abortion
- Incomplete abortion
- Missed abortion
- Septic abortion
- Round ligament stretching
- Incarcerated uterus
- Malposition of the uterus
>20 Weeks
- Labor/Preterm labor
- Placental abruption
- Placenta previa
- Vasa previa
- Uterine rupture
- Vaginal trauma
- HELLP syndrome
- Cholestasis of pregnancy
- Chorioamnionitis
- Incarcerated uterus
- Acute fatty liver of pregnancy
- Malposition of the uterus
- Placenta accreta
- Placenta increta
- Placenta percreta
Any time
- Hemorrhagic ovarian cyst
- Fibroid degeneration or torsion
- Ovarian torsion
- Constipation
Vaginal Bleeding
Vaginal Bleeding in Pregnancy (>20wks)
- Emergent delivery
- Placental abruption
- Placenta previa
- Vasa previa
- Uterine rupture
- Preterm labor
- Vaginal trauma
- Placenta accreta
- Intrauterine fetal demise
Workup
- Clinical diagnosis; patient may be reluctant to share information that she had an unsafe abortion
- Labs: CBC, blood type with Rh status, CMP, serum beta-hcg level, UA, blood cultures
- Gram stain and culture of any vaginal discharge
- Check coagulation panel to rule out DIC
- Pelvic exam – look for signs of trauma to cervix or vagina
- Ultrasound – check for intrauterine material, abdominal free fluid, pelvic abscess
- CT or MRI – may show uterine emphysema or intraperitoneal air if uterine perforation has occurred
Management
- 2 large bore IVs; aggressive IV fluid resuscitation[5]
- Assess for and control any vaginal bleeding
- Broad-spectrum antibiotics – Ampicillin 1-2 gm IV + Gentamicin 1-2 mg/kg IV + Clindamycin 600-900 mg IV or Metronidazole 500 mg IV
- Tetanus vaccination
- Early OB consult – Most will need evacuation of any remaining products of conception
- Early surgery consult - Exploratory laparotomy if any pelvic free fluid or intra-abdominal air
Disposition
Admit
Complications
- Need for hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy [6]
- Acute renal failure, liver dysfunction, ARDS, multisystem organ failure
- DIC
- Hemorrhage requiring transfusion
- Increased risk of ectopic pregnancy and infertility in the future
See Also
- First Trimester Abortion
- Sepsis
- PID
- Endometritis (Postpartum)
- Vaginal Bleeding Pregnant (greater than 20wks)
- Vaginal Bleeding Pregnant (less than 20wks)
Sources
- ↑ Stubblefield, Phillip G., and David A. Grimes. "Septic Abortion." New England Journal of Medicine 331.5 (1994): 310-14.
- ↑ Finkielman, Javier et al. "The Clinical Course of Patients with Septic Abortion Admitted to an Intensive Care Unit." Intensive Care Medicine 30.6 (2004): 1097-102.
- ↑ Tintinalli, Judith E., and J. Stephan. Stapczynski. "Septic Abortion." Tintinalli's Emergency Medicine: A Comprehensive Study Guide. 7th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2011. 682.
- ↑ Saultes, Teresa A., Devita, Diane., Heiner, Jason D. “The Back Alley Revisited: Sepsis after Attempted Self-Induced Abortion.” Western Journal of Emergency Medicine 10, 4 (2009) 278-280.
- ↑ Osazuwa, Henry, and Michael Aziken. "Septic Abortion: A Review of Social and Demographic Characteristics." Archives of Gynecology and Obstetrics 275.2 (2007): 117-19.
- ↑ Gaufberg, Salva V., MD, and Pamela L. Dyne, MD. "Abortion Complications."Abortion Complications. Medscape, 22 Oct. 2012.
