Ectopic pregnancy
Background
- Must consider in all women of childbearing age who p/w abd/pelvic pain + hypovolemia
- Leading cause of maternal death in first trimester
- Pregnancy in pt w/ prior tubal sx for sterilization is ectopic until proven otherwise
Risk Factors
- PID
- History of tubal surgery
- IUD
- Assisted reproduction techniques
- Previous ectopic
Diagnosis
Clinical Features
- Abdominal/pelvic pain
- Vaginal bleeding
- Amenorrhea
HCG Level
- Helpful in characterizing risk of ectopic, but can NOT be used to rule-out ectopic
- Normal pregnancy: hCG should double every 2d until 10000 mIU/ml
- Ectopic pregnancy: hCG increases more slowly or decreases (esp w/ spont. abortion)
Ultrasound: Pelvic
- Used to identify presence or absence of IUP
- IUP in setting of fertility tx does not necessarily r/o ectopic (heterotopic pregnancy)
- Discriminant zone
- There is no discriminant zone for an ectopic pregnancy:
- Perform US if ectopic is suspected regardless of the hCG level
- Transvag US for IUP: 1500 mIU/ml
- If hCG > 1500 and no IUP - assume EP
- Transabd US for IUP: 6000 mIU/ml
- There is no discriminant zone for an ectopic pregnancy:
- Findings
- Gestational sac alone does NOT equal IUP (must also have yolk sac)
DDX
- All Patients
- Appendicitis
- IBD
- Ovarian pathology
- Cyst
- Torsion
- PID
- Endometriosis
- Sexual assault/trauma
- Urinary tract infection
- Ureteral colic
- Pregnant Patients
- Normal (intrauterine pregnancy)
- Threatened abortion
- Inevitable abortion
- Molar pregnancy
- Heterotopic pregnancy
- Implantation bleeding
- Corpus luteum cyst
Work-Up
- Hb
- hCG quant
- T&S
- UA
- Pelvic US
Treatment
- RhoGAM for all Rh- pts
- Surgery
- Medical management (methotrexate)
Source
Tintinalli
