Term
what is the leading cause of maternal death? |
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Definition
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Term
what happens to blood volume in pregnancy? how? |
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Definition
from wk 6-12, blood volume increases 30-50%. chorionic somatomammotropin is released from the placenta, which acts as an estrogen in stimulating angiotensin I, which is cleaved to angiotensin II (potent vasoconstrictor), which stimulates aldosterone which resorbs Na+, causing resorption of water - increasing blood volume. |
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Term
what happens to the hematocrit in pregnancy as the volume increases? how does this affect the cardiac output? |
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Definition
the hematocrit falls in pregnancy. but since the plasma volume increases in pregnancy, the resultant oxygen deprivation will increase the heart rate. since heart rate and stroke volume are increased, cardiac output will also increase (SV x HR = CO). in pregnancy, cardiac output is increased from 4.5 L/min to 6.5 L/min |
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Term
why does stroke volume in pregnancy decrease later in pregnancy? how does this affect HR? |
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Definition
the IVC becomes compressed by the uterus, decreasing R heart filling, which causes the HR to increase even more it compensate. |
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Term
how is blood pressure calculated? |
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Definition
BP = SVR (systemic vascular resistance) x CO. and since CO = SV x HR, then *BP = SVR x HR X SV. |
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Term
what affects blood pressure in pregnancy? |
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Definition
BP remains almost to pre-pregnant levels - except for a tendency to fall during midtrimester as systemic vascular/peripheral resistance falls. this is due to a large *arteriovenous shunting of the placental bed and physiologic *vasodilation secondary to circulating progesterone - even though CO has increased. BP does slowly rise over the 38 wk period though as the fetus develops it's own internal resistance and chips away at the low pregnant-state SVR. |
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Term
what happens to HR over pregnancy? (*know this*) |
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Definition
it increases steadily from wk 5 on |
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Term
what happens to SVR over pregnancy? (*know this*) |
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Definition
as the placenta grows, SVR will drop - but around wk 38 the fetus provides some of its own resistance, raising the SVR slightly towards the end. |
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Term
what is the difference between systolic and diastolic pressure? (*know this*) |
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Definition
systolic pressure is like if you turn on a hose and put your hand over the end - the force that hits you (vertical pressure) is systolic pressure. diastolic pressure is if you capped the end then wrapped your hands around it - the pressure pushing out (transverse vertical) is like diastolic pressure. |
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Term
what happens to systolic/diastolic pressure over pregnancy? (*know this*) |
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Definition
both drop b/c of placental shunting then slightly increase at the end |
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Term
what happens to stroke volume over pregnancy? (*know this*) |
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Definition
this increases until about 32 weeks when the IVC becomes compressed, which causes it to fall slightly |
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Term
what happens to CO over pregnancy? (*know this*) |
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Definition
CO continually increases over pregnancy |
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Term
how does the fact that the hematocrit falls during pregnancy affect colloid oncotic pressure? what is the result of this? |
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Definition
the fall in hematocrit causes a decrease in oncotic pressure, which increases hydrostatic pressure - allowing fluid to leak into the interstitium = mild edema. |
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Term
what are normal physiologic changes in pregnancy which can mimic symptoms of cardiac disease? |
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Definition
tired, dyspneic, orthopnic, syncope, light-headedness, , peripheral edema, hyperventilation, distended neck veins with prominent A and V waves, brisk/diffuse/displaced left ventricular impulse, palpable right ventricular impulse, increased S1 intensity, persistent splitting of S2, cervical venous hum, mammary souffle |
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Term
what are the 3 main cardiovascular factors for maternal mortality? |
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Definition
1) *L ventricular systolic dysfunction/ejection fraction <.5* (so that when CO increases as it normally does, the heart fails) 2) *cyanosis (pulse ox <90%) 3) *L heart obstruction (like aortic stenosis) |
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Term
how can you tell if a pt has L ventricular dysfunction? |
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Definition
find the maximal point of intensity on the 5th intercostal space of the midclavicular line. it should be the same size as a normal finger pad, but w/L ventricular impairment this impulse will be huge (3-4 finger pads wide). there will also be a 3rd heart sound. |
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Term
what kinds of cardiac disease carry <1% risk of maternal mortality in pregnancy? |
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Definition
atrial septal defect, ventricular septal defect, patent ductus arteriosus, pulmonary/tricuspid valve disease, corrected tetralogy of fallot, and bioprosthetic valve. |
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Term
what kinds of cardiac disease carry a 25-50% risk of maternal mortality w/pregnancy? |
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Definition
aortic stenosis, previous MI (L ventricular function), primary pulmonary HTN, coarctation of the aorta, and peripartum cardiomyopathy (gross dilatation of all 4 ventricular chambers that occurs anywhere from the 3rd month of pregnancy to 6 months post delivery: idiopathic) - all of which cause L heart obstruction. |
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Term
when in a code situation, where should you feel to determine if they are still alive? |
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Definition
the femoral pulse. also: learn to intubate a pt. |
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Term
what characterizes proper drug administration in pregnancy? |
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Definition
don't have the pt on any drugs unless you have to, if you do: category A: universally safe (multivitamin), category B: presumed no evidence of risk (fish oil), category C: benefits may justify the potential risk - but need to articulate a good reason (diuretic), category D: unsafe (ACE inhibitors), category X: absolutely contraindicated (retinoic acid) |
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Term
what should you do any time a pregnant pt may need to go on a drug? |
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Definition
look it up every time (b/c drugs change classifications) |
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Term
what characterizes anticoagulation therapy in pregnancy? |
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Definition
no strategy is safe for both mother and fetus. warfarin causes teratogenic effects and intracranial bleeding. heparin doesn’t cross placenta and has no teratogenic effects but causes thrombocytopenia in mother, which can cause bleeding. |
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Term
when is a c-section indicated in a pregnant pt from a cardiology perspective? |
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Definition
aortic dissection, marfan syndrome w/dilated aortic root (no 2nd heart sound) and warfarin w/in 2 weeks of labor (will cause fetal intracranial bleeding). |
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Term
why is lactation encouraged in terms of the heart postpartum? |
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Definition
good built-in diuretic: get rid of salts and fluid. |
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