Post-partum Haemorrhage (PPH)
This is defined as blood loss of >500mls after delivery and it is divided into two subtypes:
Primary:
– This is blood loss which occurs within 24 hours of delivery:
– The causes can be remembered by thinking of the 4 T’s
Causes:
Tone (uterine atony most commonly)
Trauma (large baby)
Thrombus (clots)
Tissue (fibroids)
– In addition, it can be caused by abnormalities of the placenta (placenta previa/accrete)
Management:
– 1st line –> Apply bimanual compression (pressure aims to compress uterine arteries) with fundal massage
– 2nd line is medical management –> IV syntocinon (oxytocin) 10 units or IV ergometrine 500ug
– You can also use IM Carboprost (prostaglandin which aids uterine contraction)
If still bleeding take to operating theatre for surgical approaches.
– 1st line is Bakri balloon tamponade –> used if uterine atony is main cause
– If uncontrolled, B-lynch suture or uterine artery embolism
– If still not controlled –> ligate internal branch of the internal iliac artery
– Last resort is hysterectomy