Bowel Sound Learning Module Grade
Labour and Delivery Care Module: 10. Ruptured Uterus Study Session 10 Ruptured Uterus Introduction Ruptured uterus is a tearing or bursting of the uterus due to the pressure exerted by an obstructed labour. Uterine rupture is very prevalent in developing countries like Ethiopia, where around 94% of deliveries occur at home with no skilled health professional attending the labour. When labour ends with a ruptured uterus, the usual consequences for the woman (if she survives), are losing her baby and losing her uterus.
Start studying Module 7 -Signs and Symptoms. Learn vocabulary. -low grade fever. -decreased or absent bowel sounds indicate ileus secondary to fluid shifts.
Almost all cases of uterine rupture occur among multiparous women, who have previously given birth at least once after their baby reached 28 weeks of gestation. You will find out why this is so later in this study session. Uterine rupture can also occur among women with a scarred uterus, if the scar tissue tears open. However, in Ethiopia and other developing countries, almost all cases of uterine rupture occur in women with an unscarred uterus whose labour became obstructed when noone was present to intervene. In this study session you will learn about the risk factors and clinical features of ruptured uterus, its consequences for the mother and the baby, and how to institute life-saving interventions. Learning Outcomes for Study Session 10 When you have studied this session, you should be able to: 10.1 Define and use correctly all of the key words printed in bold.
(SAQs 10.1 and 10.2) 10.2 Describe the predisposing factors for uterine rupture and explain why multiparous women are at greater risk than first-time mothers. (SAQ 10.2) 10.3 Describe the warning signs and clinical features of uterine rupture and the common complications that result from it. (SAQs 10.3 and 10.4) 10.4 Explain how you would perform life-saving interventions for women with a ruptured uterus, and what actions you would take to reduce the risk of uterine rupture during labour. • What factors can you suggest that would increase the risk of a ruptured uterus occurring? • Uterine rupture may occur if the labour is obstructed due to: • C ephalopelvic disproportion (the fetal head is too large or the mother’s pelvis is too small to allow the baby to descend down the birth canal). • Persistent malpresentation or malposition of the fetus (e.g.
Breech, face, brow or shoulder presentation, or the baby is head down (vertex presentation) but in the occipito-posterior position (with the back of its skull towards the mother’s back). • Multiple pregnancy (twins or more babies, especially if they are ‘locked’ at the neck or conjoined/fused together). • Physical obstruction preventing the baby from descending (e.g. A tumour in the abdomen or uterus). • S carring of the uterus (which we referred to in the introduction to this study session). The first four causes have already been covered in detail in earlier study sessions, but there is more to be said about uterine scarring and some other reasons why uterine rupture may occur.
10.1.1 Uterine scarring A woman who has had previous surgery on her uterus – for example, to deliver a baby by caesarean section, or to remove a uterine tumour – will be left with scar tissue where the severed uterine wall has healed. Scar tissue is less flexible than the intact wall of the uterus and it cannot stretch evenly during labour contractions. If the labour is obstructed for a long time, the powerful contractions of the muscle layer in the uterine wall may cause the scar tissue to tear open. Another reason for scarring of the uterus is if it was perforated during an abortion for a previous pregnancy. 10.1.2 Scarred cervix The cervix may also have been damaged during a previous delivery, for example by forceps used to help deliver a baby that was failing to make progress after the head had crowned.
Or cervical damage may have resulted if surgical instruments were inserted into the uterus via the vagina, for example to control postpartum haemorrhage, or to treat a problem in the uterus such as inflammation of the uterine lining. In any of these cases the injured cervix will develop scar tissue after healing that may burst open during an obstructed labour. 10.2 Why are multiparous women more at risk of uterine rupture? A multiparous woman is one who has previously given birth to at least one baby after 28 weeks of gestation. The gestational age is significant, because by 28 weeks the fetus will have reached a substantial size and weight, so the multiparous woman’s uterus will already have been stretched. One result of this stretching is that the delivery is expected to be easier in subsequent pregnancies – which is, indeed, usually the case.
Despite this fact, multiparous women are more likely than primiparous (first-time) mothers to experience uterine rupture if their labour is obstructed. 10.2.1 Uterine inertia Another reason why multiparous women with prolonged or obstructed labours are more at risk of uterine rupture relates to the fact that they continue experiencing powerful labour contractions for much longer than first-time mothers. In primiparous women, the uterine contractions remain relatively strong only for about the first 24 hours of labour, after which the contractions become weaker in intensity and shorter in duration. Exhaust Header Design Software Free Download on this page. After about 36 hours, in the majority of primiparous women, the uterus is exhausted and they develop uterine inertia, which is when the contractions become very weak in intensity, with a short duration and long intervals between them. For such first-time mothers, because uterine contractions have almost ceased, uterine rupture is a rare phenomenon. By contrast, the risk to multiparous women whose labour is obstructed is that the uterine contractions remain forceful and frequent for very much longer, and as a result the uterus is more likely to rupture.
Primiparous women do face other serious problems, however, because uterine inertia means that the fetal head will stay in the maternal pelvis for a long time. This increases the risk of fetal hypoxia (oxygen shortage), and fistula formation, retention of urine and infection in the obstructed bladder of the mother. 10.2.2 Traditional abdominal massage In some parts of Ethiopia, abdominal massage during labour is a common cultural practice, particularly when labour is prolonged. Traditional birth attendants or village women use butter and other lubricants to rub the abdomen and apply pressure on the fundus (rounded top) of the uterus to try to push the baby downwards. This is an extremely harmful traditional practice since it can lead to a ruptured uterus, especially in multiparous women (for the reasons given above). 10.2.3 Inappropriate use of uterotonic agents Whenever you use a uterotonic drug (drugs that cause uterine contraction, e.g. Misoprostol, oxytocin or ergometrine) for active management of the third stage of labour (recall Study Session 6), you must first check that there is no other fetus in the uterus.
This is because if you mistakenly administer a uterotonic agent when there is still a fetus in the uterus, it will contract so powerfully that it can easily rupture, especially in the case of multiparous women. Also it is likely to asphyxiate the baby. Tender swollen abdomen Tenderness is pain elicited when you touch the abdomen. The abdomen is tender because of the rupture in the uterus and irritation caused by blood accumulating in the abdominal cavity. The abdomen appears distended (swollen) because the uterus is initially totally wrapped around the fetus and blood is escaping into the abdominal cavity.
Bowel movement will be reduced or absent (paralytic ileus) so you will not be able to hear bowel sounds with your stethoscope. The bladder may also be obstructed, which contributes to the swelling and tenderness. As time passes, infection may develop in the abdomen, which will cause additional swelling. Easily palpable fetal parts, absent movement and fetal heart sounds The fetus cannot survive long in a ruptured uterus. After the initial wrapping of the uterus tightly around its body, parts of the fetus may emerge through the rupture, or the entire fetus may escape from the uterus into the abdominal cavity. When this happens, if you palpate the abdomen, only the abdominal wall will be between your hand and the fetus, so you will be able to feel the fetal parts easily. If the baby has died, the mother will not feel it moving, and you will not be able to hear a fetal heartbeat.
Extent of blood loss Uterine rupture by its nature is a trauma to the uterine tissue where there will be tearing of uterine muscles and blood vessels. If the rupture involves major blood vessels, particularly uterine arteries, the blood loss will be massive. Unless rapid emergency intervention occurs, the blood loss will almost certainly cause the death of the fetus, and the mother will be in severe haemorrhagic shock (described below), which will be followed by her death. If the rupture occurs in an area of the uterus where major blood vessels aren’t involved, the woman has a greater chance of survival. Presence of established infection A ruptured uterus means there is direct communication between the birth canal and the abdominal cavity. Other internal organs, including parts of the intestines, rectum and bladder may also have been damaged and be leaking their contents into the abdomen.
As a result, microorganisms can easily spread around the whole of the abdominal cavity, and enter the blood circulation through the ruptured blood vessels. The development of infection in the abdominal cavity is called peritonitis; infection disseminated around the body in the blood circulation is called septicaemia.
If the woman survives the initial rupture but remains untreated for more than about 6 hours, the risk of one or both of these conditions occurring is very high indeed. Therefore, early recognition that a rupture has occurred and early referral are of paramount significance in saving the life of the mother. Depending on the extent of blood loss, duration of time since the rupture and status of any infection, the woman with a ruptured uterus may develop some or all of the complications described below.
10.4 Interventions in ruptured uterus The following guidelines will help you to prevent or reduce the risk of ruptured uterus occurring in labouring women in your community: • Use the partograph to follow the progress of a woman in labour, to ensure you get early warning if the labour is not progressing normally (you learned how to use the partograph in Study Session 4 of this Module). • Refer women quickly if you suspect the labour is prolonged or obstructed (see referral criteria below). • Advise all multiparous women with a potentially scarred uterus (because of complications with an earlier birth) to deliver in a health facility with the capacity for blood transfusion and caesarean delivery.
Give the same advice to any woman who has had a uterine tumour removed. • Explain to community members why it is important not to massage the uterus during labour, or apply pressure on the uterus to try to hasten delivery; ask them not to do this even though it is a traditional practice. • Use uterotonic drugs to help deliver the placenta, but only after checking that the last fetus has been delivered. • When should you refer a multiparous or primiparous woman whose labour is prolonged?
(Think back to Study Session 9.) • Referral for prolonged labour should happen for all women if: • The latent first stage of labour lasts more than 8 hours before entering into the active first stage • The active first stage lasts more than 12 hours before entering into the second stage • The second stage of labour lasts more than one hour in a multiparous woman, or more than two hours in a primiparous woman, unless the birth of the baby seems to be imminent. Your major role is primary prevention – in this case, making sure that if there is obstructed labour, you can get the woman to a health facility for emergency care in time to prevent uterine rupture. However, there are many reasons why you may have to give emergency care yourself to a woman with a ruptured uterus, where your role will be secondary prevention of the complications associated with uterine rupture. • Think back to what you learned in the Antenatal Care Module (Study Session 13) and the discussion there about making a referral.
What must you remember to do? • You should: • Write a referral note with as much detail as possible. • Mobilise the community’s emergency transport plan for the mother. Go with her if you can. • If possible, warn the health facility to expect her.
If there is a choice of health facility at roughly equal distance, check which one has facilities for emergency surgery and blood transfusion and send her there. Figure 10.2 Position for transporting a woman in shock to hospital. Cover her with blankets to keep her warm.
If you have been trained to do so, begin to give her intravenous fluids. You learned how to do this in the Antenatal Care Module, Study Session 22, and in your practical skills training. If she is conscious, she can drink water or rehydration fluids (oral rehydration salts, ORS).
If she is not conscious, do not give her anything by mouth - no medicines, drink or food. Summary of Study Session 10 In Study Session 10 you have learned that: • In Ethiopia, uterine rupture most often occurs because of neglected obstructed labour. With early intervention and appropriate care, uterine rupture is almost entirely preventable. • More cases of uterine rupture occur among multiparous women than among primiparous women. One reason is that in primiparous woman uterine intertia acts to prevent contractions remaining forceful and frequent for such a long time that uterine rupture occurs.
• Uterine inertia in primiparous women has other risks: because the fetal head stays in the pelvis for a long time there is increased risk of fetal hypoxia, fistula formation, retention of urine and infection of the bladder. • The main predisposing factor for uterine rupture is an obstructed labour, which may be due to cephalopelvic disproportion, malpresentation/malposition of the fetus, multiple pregnancy, a uterine tumour, or scarring. Other factors increasing the risk of rupture include a previously repaired fistula, injudicious use of uterotonic drugs, and abdominal massage during labour by traditional healers. 36 China Town Film Songs Free Download on this page. • The clinical features of imminent uterine rupture are persistent uterine contractions of 60–90 seconds duration or longer, occurring more than 5 times in every 10 minutes, fetal heartbeat derangement (persistently above 160 beats/minute or below 120 beats/minute), Bandl’s ring formation, abdominal tenderness, and maybe vaginal bleeding. • The key sign that a uterus has ruptured is that contractions stop completely. • Other signs of a ruptured uterus may include abdominal tenderness, easily palpable fetal parts, abdominal distension, absence of fetal kick and absence of fetal heartbeat. • The clinical condition of a woman with a ruptured uterus depends on the extent of blood loss, duration of rupture and presence of established infection.
• Common complications of uterine rupture are fetal death, maternal death, infection and haemorrhagic and/or septic shock, peritonitis, acute kidney failure, and surgical removal of the uterus • Some reasons why so many Ethiopian women die of a ruptured uterus are: reluctance to seek skilled help at birth and then delay in seeking medical help following a rupture; further delay in getting treatment because of distance to a health facility; or lack of equipment and appropriately trained personnel when the woman arrives for emergency care. Answer Factors predisposing a woman to develop a uterine rupture (key words in bold) are: • Obstructed labour caused by: the fetal head being too large or the mother’s pelvis being too small for the baby to descend through the birth canal ( cephalopelvic disproportion); malpresentation and malposition of the fetus; or multiple pregnancy (see Study Session 8 for details of all these). • Other physical obstructions such as a tumour, or scarring from damage at a previous birth (e.g.
A fistula, a torn opening between the vagina and bladder, rectum, urethra or ureter). • Traditional practices, e.g. Inappropriate abdominal massage or pushing down on the fundus during labour. • Inappropriate use of a uterotonic drug (used to cause contractions). Answer P rimiparous women are giving birth for the first time. In a first birth there is the likelihood of a longer labour.
However, in primiparous women, uterine inerti a (contractions become weaker and shorter, with longer intervals) occurs after about 36 hours, greatly reducing the risk of uterine rupture. In contrast, in multiparous women have had at least one baby after 28 weeks’ gestation, the uterus will go on contracting strongly for much longer than the primiparous uterus. If obstruction prevents delivery for a long time, particularly if there is scarring from a complicated earlier birth, the uterus is much more likely to rupture.
Answer • a.Complications of uterine rupture include: • Death of the fetus unless there is immediate surgery to remove it. • Severe haemorrhage and haemorrhagic shock for the mother (identified by faintness, pale skin, fast pulse, dropping blood pressure, fast breathing, lapses into unconsciousness, reduced urine output) leading to death of the mother unless she gets immediate treatment. • Infection: peritonitis (infection of the abdominal cavity) and/or septicaemia (bacterial infection of the blood), leading to potentially fatal septic shock.
• Acute kidney failure (because of loss of blood volume). • Hysterectomy.
• b.The most important action is to get the woman to the nearest health facility capable of dealing with a ruptured uterus as quickly as possible; she needs to be kept warm and calm, lying down with feet higher than ‘her’ head and her head on one side. You should give her intravenous fluids. If she is unconscious do not give anything by mouth. Except for third party materials and/or otherwise stated (see ) the content in OpenLearn is released for use under the terms of the. In short this allows you to use the content throughout the world without payment for non-commercial purposes in accordance with the Creative Commons non commercial sharealike licence.
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Materials: •, Tracks 9 and 10 () • (pp. 41-46) • Letter cards for a, e, i, o, and u. • Chart displaying long vowel words and pictures (ex. Ape, eagle, ice cream, ocean, unicorn) • Chart displaying short vowel symbols, words and pictures (ex. Alligator, eggs, iguana, octopus, umbrella) • Optional: Cards with medial-position short vowel pictures (ex. Hat, cat, hen, pen, fish, dish, dog, log, gum, drum) • Optional: Cards with medial-position long vowel pictures (ex. Snake, rake, sheep, sleep, kite, night, goat, coat, flute, suit) Note: If you do not have the CD or Mini-Charts, you can still teach this short vowels and long vowels lesson plan using the folk tune listed on the page.
You can create your own mini-charts using the words in bold print letters in each verse of the Song Lyrics. Find out more about. Order our cost-saving online. • Practice singing Oh, Do You Know daily for a few days.
Then try singing the song without hearing the words, using the instrumental track (Track 10). Allow different students to point to the Mini-Charts words while singing. • Using the Mini-Chart Templates, vary the order of vowels (Ex:short i, short a, short u, short e, short o) or vary short and long vowels in sequence (Ex: short a, long a, short e, long e, etc.) • As a learning center task, have students match pairs of picture cards with the same vowel sounds (Ex: cat/hat, snake/rake). Note: At this point in their learning, it is easier for children to do this task if rhyming words are used. As they advance, they may be able to match short common vowels in pictures of non-rhyming words such as bag and bat.