This document provides information on prenatal care and initial prenatal evaluation. It discusses the importance of antenatal surveillance, typical signs and symptoms of pregnancy like amenorrhea, changes to the uterus, breasts and skin during pregnancy, fetal movement, pregnancy tests using hCG levels, sonographic recognition of pregnancy, goals of initial prenatal evaluation like determining health status and gestational age, components of the prenatal record, definitions of terms like gravida and parity, the normal duration of pregnancy in trimesters, and assessing a patient's previous and current health status.
This document provides information on prenatal care and initial prenatal evaluation. It discusses the importance of antenatal surveillance, typical signs and symptoms of pregnancy like amenorrhea, changes to the uterus, breasts and skin during pregnancy, fetal movement, pregnancy tests using hCG levels, sonographic recognition of pregnancy, goals of initial prenatal evaluation like determining health status and gestational age, components of the prenatal record, definitions of terms like gravida and parity, the normal duration of pregnancy in trimesters, and assessing a patient's previous and current health status.
This document provides information on prenatal care and initial prenatal evaluation. It discusses the importance of antenatal surveillance, typical signs and symptoms of pregnancy like amenorrhea, changes to the uterus, breasts and skin during pregnancy, fetal movement, pregnancy tests using hCG levels, sonographic recognition of pregnancy, goals of initial prenatal evaluation like determining health status and gestational age, components of the prenatal record, definitions of terms like gravida and parity, the normal duration of pregnancy in trimesters, and assessing a patient's previous and current health status.
This document provides information on prenatal care and initial prenatal evaluation. It discusses the importance of antenatal surveillance, typical signs and symptoms of pregnancy like amenorrhea, changes to the uterus, breasts and skin during pregnancy, fetal movement, pregnancy tests using hCG levels, sonographic recognition of pregnancy, goals of initial prenatal evaluation like determining health status and gestational age, components of the prenatal record, definitions of terms like gravida and parity, the normal duration of pregnancy in trimesters, and assessing a patient's previous and current health status.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1/ 33
Prenatal Care
• Antenatal surveillance is of paramount
importance for proper pregnancy and subsequent healthy newborns. Pregnancy is usually identified when a woman presents with symptoms and possibly a positive home urine pregnancy test result. Typically, such women receive confirmatory testing of urine or blood for human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG). Signs and Symptoms • Amenorrhea • The abrupt cessation of menstruation in a healthy reproductive-aged woman who previously has experienced spontaneous, cyclical, predictable menses is highly suggestive of pregnancy. Thus, amenorrhea is not a reliable pregnancy indicator until 10 days or more after expected menses. Lower-Reproductive-Tract Changes • As pregnancy progresses, the external cervical os and cervical canal may become sufficiently patulous to admit a fingertip, but the internal os should remain closed. The substantial increase in progesterone secretion associated with pregnancy affects the consistency and microscopic appearance of cervical mucus. Uterine Changes • During the first few weeks of pregnancy, uterine size grows principally in the anteroposterior diameter. During bimanual examination, it feels doughy or elastic. At 6 to 8 weeks’ menstrual age, the firm cervix contrasts with the now softer fundus and the compressible interposed softened isthmus—Hegar sign. Isthmic softening may be so marked that the cervix and uterine body seem to be separate organs. By 12 weeks’ gestation, the uterine body is almost globular, with an average diameter of 8 cm. Breast and Skin Changes • Anatomical changes in the breasts that accompany pregnancy are characteristic during a first pregnancy . Increased pigmentation and visual changes in abdominal striae are common to, but not diagnostic of, pregnancy. They may be absent during pregnancy and may also be seen in women taking estrogen-containing contraceptives. Fetal Movement • In general, after a first successful pregnancy, a woman may first perceive fetal movements between 16 and 18 weeks’ gestation. A primigravida may not appreciate fetal movements until approximately 2 weeks later. At about 20 weeks, depending on maternal habitus, an examiner can begin to detect fetal movements. ■ Pregnancy Tests • Detection of hCG in maternal blood and urine is the basis for endocrine assays of pregnancy. This hormone is a glycoprotein with high carbohydrate content. There are subtle hCG variants, and these differ by their carbohydrate moieties. The general structure of hCG is a heterodimer composed of two dissimilar subunits, designated α and β, which are noncovalently linked. Measurement of hCG • As noted, hCG is composed of both an α- and a β-subunit, but the β-subunit is structurally distinct from that of LH, FSH, and TSH. With this recognition, antibodies were developed with high specificity for the hCG β-subunit. This specificity allows its detection, and numerous commercial immunoassays are available for measuring serum and urine hCG levels. • One commonly employed technique is the sandwich- type immunoassay. With this test, a monoclonal antibody against the β-subunit is bound to a solid-phase support. The attached antibody is then exposed to and binds hCG in the serum or urine specimen. A second antibody is then added, binds to another site on the hCG molecule, and “sandwiches” the bound hCG between the two antibodies. In some assays, the second antibody is linked to an enzyme, such as alkaline phosphatase. When substrate for the enzyme is added, a color develops. • False-positive hCG test results are rare. The most common factors are heterophilic antibodies. These are produced by an individual and bind to the animal-derived test antibodies used in a given immunoassay. Elevated hCG levels may also reflect molar pregnancy and its associated cancers .Other rare causes of positive assays without pregnancy are: (1) exogenous hCG injection used for weight loss, (2) renal failure with impaired hCG clearance, (3) physiological pituitary hCG, and (4) hCG-producing tumors that most commonly originate from gastrointestinal sites, ovary, bladder, or lung. Home Pregnancy Tests • Millions of over-the-counter pregnancy test kits are sold annually in the United States. In one study, Cole and associates found that a detection limit of 12.5 mIU/mL would be required to diagnose 95 percent of pregnancies at the time of missed menses. They noted that only one brand had this degree of sensitivity. Two other brands gave false-positive or invalid results. In fact, with an hCG concentration of 100 mIU/mL clearly positive results were displayed by only 44 percent of brands. ■ Sonographic Recognition of Pregnancy • Transvaginal sonography has revolutionized early pregnancy imaging and is commonly used to accurately establish gestational age and confirm pregnancy location. It may be seen with transvaginal sonography by 4 to 5 weeks’ gestation. • Visualization of the yolk sac—a brightly echogenic ring with an anechoic center—confirms with certainty an intrauterine location for the pregnancy and can normally be seen by the middle of the fifth week. As shown in Figure 9-3, after 6 weeks, an embryo is seen as a linear structure immediately adjacent to the yolk sac, and cardiac motion is typically noted at this point. Up to 12 weeks’ gestation, the crown-rump length is predictive of gestational age within 4 days . INITIAL PRENATAL EVALUATION • Prenatal care should be initiated as soon as there is a reasonable likelihood of pregnancy. Major goals are to: (1) define the health status of the mother and fetus, (2) estimate the gestational age, and (3) initiate a plan for continuing obstetrical care. ■ Prenatal Record
• Use of a standardized record within a perinatal
health-care system greatly aids antepartum and intrapartum management. Standardizing documentation may allow communication and care continuity between providers and enable objective measures of care quality to be evaluated over time and across different clinical settings . Definitions There are sever • There are several definitions pertinent to establishment of an accurate prenatal record. 1. Nulligravida—a woman who currently is not pregnant nor has ever been pregnant. 2. Gravida—a woman who currently is pregnant or has been in the past, irrespective of the pregnancy outcome. With the establishment of the first pregnancy, she becomes a primigravida, and with successive pregnancies, a multigravida. 3. Nullipara—a woman who has never completed a pregnancy beyond 20 weeks’ gestation. She may not have been pregnant or may have had a spontaneous or elective abortion(s) or an ectopic pregnancy. • 4. Primipara—a woman who has been delivered only once of a fetus or fetuses born alive or dead with an estimated length of gestation of 20 or more weeks. In the past, a 500-g birthweight threshold was used to define parity. As discussed in Chapter 1 (p. 2), this threshold is now controversial because many states still use this weight to differentiate a stillborn fetus from an abortus. However, the survival of neonates with birthweights < 500 g is no longer uncommon. 5. Multipara—a woman who has completed two or more pregnancies to 20 weeks’ gestation or more. Parity is determined by the number of pregnancies reaching 20 weeks. Normal Pregnancy Duration • The mean duration of pregnancy calculated from the first day of the last normal menstrual period is very close to 280 days or 40 weekIt is customary to estimate the expected delivery date by adding 7 days to the date of the first day of the last normal menstrual period and counting back 3 months—Naegele rule. For example, if the last menstrual period began September 10, the expected date of delivery is June 17. However, a gestational age or menstrual age calculated in this way assumes pregnancy to have begun approximately 2 weeks before ovulation, which is not always the case.. Trimesters • It has become customary to divide pregnancy into three equal epochs of approximately 3 calendar months. Historically, the first trimester extends through completion of 14 weeks, the second through 28 weeks, and the third includes the 29th through 42nd weeks of pregnancy. Thus, there are three periods of 14 weeks each. • In modern obstetrics, the clinical use of trimesters to describe a specific pregnancy is imprecise. For example, it is inappropriate in cases of uterine hemorrhage to categorize the problem temporally as “third-trimester bleeding.” Appropriate management for the mother and her fetus will vary remarkably depending on whether bleeding begins early or late in the third trimester. Because precise knowledge of fetal age is imperative for ideal obstetrical management, the clinically appropriate unit is weeks of gestation completed. ■ Previous and Current Health Status • For the most part, the same essentials go into appropriate history taking from the pregnant woman as elsewhere in medicine. The menstrual history is also important. If her menstrual cycles were significantly longer than 28 to 30 days, ovulation more likely occurred well beyond 14 days. If the intervals were much longer and irregular, chronic anovulation is likely to have preceded some of the episodes identified as menses. Thus, without a history of regular, predictable, cyclic, spontaneous menses that suggest ovulatory cycles, accurate dating of pregnancy by history and physical examination is difficult. • Great consideration is also given to drugs, alcohol. Gestational age can be estimated with considerable precision by appropriately timed and carefully performed clinical uterine size examination that is coupled with knowledge of the last menses. Uterine size similar to a small orange roughly correlates with a 6-week gestation; a large orange, with an 8-week pregnancy; and a grapefruit, with one at 12 weeks . • Initial blood tests include a complete blood count, a determination of blood type with Rh status, and an antibody screen. The Institute of Medicine recommends universal human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) testing, with patient notification and right of refusal, as a routine part of prenatal care. Cervical Infections • Chlamydia trachomatis is isolated from the cervix in 2 to 13 percent of pregnant women. Risk factors include unmarried status, recent change in sexual partner or multiple concurrent partners, age younger than 25 years, inner-city residence, history or presence of other sexually transmitted diseases, and little or no prenatal care. Neisseria gonorrhoeae is the gram-negative diplococcal bacteria responsible for causing gonorrhea. Risk factors for gonorrhea are similar for those for chlamydial infection. SUBSEQUENT PRENATAL VISITS • Subsequent prenatal visits have been traditionally scheduled at 4-week intervals until 28 weeks, then every 2 weeks until 36 weeks, and weekly thereafter. Women with complicated pregnancies often require return visits at 1- to 2-week intervals. For example, in twin pregnancies, Luke and colleagues (2003) found that a specialized prenatal care program emphasizing nutrition and education and requiring return visits every 2 weeks resulted in improved outcomes. Fetal Heart Sounds • Instruments incorporating Doppler ultrasound are often used to easily detect fetal heart action, and in the absence of maternal obesity, heart sounds are almost always detectable by 10 weeks with such instruments.The fetal heart rate ranges from 110 to 160 beats per minute and is typically heard as a double sound. ■ Subsequent Laboratory Tests • If initial results were normal, most tests need not be repeated. Fetal aneuploidy screening may be performed at 11 to 14 weeks and/or at 15 to 20 weeks. Hematocrit or hemoglobin determination, along with syphilis serology if it is prevalent in the population, should be repeated at 28 to 32 weeks . For women at increased risk for HIV acquisition during pregnancy, repeat testing is recommended in the third trimester, preferably before 36 weeks’ gestation . Group B Streptococcal Infection • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2010b) recommend that vaginal and rectal group B streptococcal (GBS) cultures be obtained in all women between 35 and 37 weeks’ gestation, and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (2013g) has endorsed this recommendation. Gestational Diabetes • All pregnant women should be screened for gestational diabetes mellitus, whether by history, clinical factors, or routine laboratory testing. Although laboratory testing between 24 and 28 weeks’ gestation is the most sensitive approach, there may be pregnant women at low risk who are less likely to benefit from testing. • During pregnancy, it is recommended to take a folic acid supplement, polyvitamins, weight control and a healthy life.