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Abortion: Pregnancy Termination or Loss Before 20 Weeks' Gestation or With A Fetus Delivered Weighing 500 G Early Pregnancy Lost

Abortion can be spontaneous or induced and is defined as termination of pregnancy before 20 weeks of gestation or when the fetus weighs less than 500g. The majority of first trimester spontaneous abortions are caused by chromosomal abnormalities in the fetus. Half of euploid abortions have a normal chromosomal complement while the other half have an abnormality like trisomy, monosomy X, or triploidy. Maternal factors such as infections, medical conditions, trauma, nutrition, substance use, occupational/environmental exposures, and increasing paternal age can also contribute to increased risk of spontaneous abortion. Spontaneous abortions are clinically classified as threatened, incomplete, or complete depending on the degree of cervical dilation and tissue
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
29 views2 pages

Abortion: Pregnancy Termination or Loss Before 20 Weeks' Gestation or With A Fetus Delivered Weighing 500 G Early Pregnancy Lost

Abortion can be spontaneous or induced and is defined as termination of pregnancy before 20 weeks of gestation or when the fetus weighs less than 500g. The majority of first trimester spontaneous abortions are caused by chromosomal abnormalities in the fetus. Half of euploid abortions have a normal chromosomal complement while the other half have an abnormality like trisomy, monosomy X, or triploidy. Maternal factors such as infections, medical conditions, trauma, nutrition, substance use, occupational/environmental exposures, and increasing paternal age can also contribute to increased risk of spontaneous abortion. Spontaneous abortions are clinically classified as threatened, incomplete, or complete depending on the degree of cervical dilation and tissue
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ABORTION

- Abortion: spontaneous or induced termination of pregnancy before fetal viability


- Induced abortion describes surgical or medical termination of a live fetus that has not reached viability
- Abortion: pregnancy termination or loss before 20 weeks' gestation or with a fetus delivered weighing < 500 g
- Early pregnancy lost:
 empty gestational sac or a gestational sac containing an embryo or fetus without fetal heart
activity within the first 12 6/7 weeks of gestation
- Spontaneous abortion includes threatened, inevitable, incomplete, complete, and missed abortion
- Recurrent pregnancy loss meant to identify women with repetitive miscarriage
- Pregnancy of unknown location (PUL) describes a pregnancy identified by hCG testing but without a
confirmed sonographic location (definite ectopic pregnancy, probable ectopic, PUL, probable IUP, and definite IUP)

First trimester spontaneous abortion

- Pathogenesis
 80 % occur within the first 12 weeks of gestation
 demise of the embryo or fetus nearly always precedes spontaneous expulsion
 Death is accompanied by hemorrhage into the decidua basalis adjacent tissue
necrosis stimulates uterine contractions and expulsion.
 Intact gestational sac:filled with fluid.
 Anembryonic miscarriage: no identifiable embryonic elements; blighted
 Embryonic miscarriages: display developmental abnormality of the embryo, fetus, yolk sac, and, at times, the
placenta.
 Later pregnancy losses, the fetus usually does not die before expulsion, and other sources
for abortion are sought
- Incidence
 5-20 weeks
- Fetal Factors
 ½ euploid abortions: normal chromosomal complement
 Other half has a chromosomal abnormality
 Both abortion and chromosomal anomaly rates decline with advancing gestational age
 Most common abnormalities are trisomy, found in 50 to 60 percent; monosomy X, in 9 to 1 3 percent; and
triploidy, in 1 1 to 1 2 percent
 Trisomies typically result from isolated nondisjunction which rise with maternal age
 Monosomy X (45,X) is the single most frequent specific chromosomal abnormality. This is Turner syndrome
 Triploidy is often associated with hydropic or molar placental degeneration. Advanced maternal and paternal
ages do not increase the incidence of triploidy.
 Tetraploid fetuses most often abort early in gestation, and they are rarely liveborn
- Maternal factors
 chromosomally normal pregnancy losses, maternal influences play a role
 Infections
 Medical disorders
o risks are associated with poorly controlled diabetes
mellitus, obesity, thyroid disease, and systemic lupus erythematosus
 Cancer
o therapeutic doses of radiation are undeniably abortifacient
 Surgical procedure
o uncomplicated surgical procedures performed during early pregnancy are unlikely
to increase the abortion risk
o Trauma seldom causes first-trimester miscarriage. Major trauma-especially abdominal can cause
fetal loss, but is more likely as pregnancy advances
 Nutrition
o Sole deficiency of one nutrient or moderate deficiency of all does not appear to increase risks for
abortion.
o Dietary quality may play a role, as miscarriage risk may be reduced in women who consume a diet
rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, vegetable oils, and fish
 Social and behavioral factors
o higher miscarriage risks are most often related to chronic and especially heavy use of legal
substance
a. alcohol: potent teratogenic effects; increased miscarriage risk is only seen
with regular or heavy use
b. Smoking
c. Illicit drugs
d. moderate consumption likely is not a major abortion risk and that any associated risk with
higher intake is unsettled
 Occupational and Environmental Factors
o Environmental toxins: bisphenol A, phthalates, polychlorinated biphenyls, and
dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT)
o slightly increased miscarriage risks:exposed to sterilizing agents, x-rays, and antineoplastic drugs
o higher miscarriage risk was found for dental assistants exposed to more than 3 hours of nitrous
oxide daily if there was no gas-scavenging equipment
- Paternal factors
 Increasing paternal age is significantly associated with greater risk for abortion
 chromosomal abnormalities in spermatozoa likely play a role

Spontaneous abortion Clinical classification

1.Threatened Abortion
 Dx: bloody vaginal discharge or bleeding appears through a closed cervical os during the first
20 weeks
 Differentiated with implantation or bleeding during early gestation
 accompanied by suprapubic discomfort, mild cramps, pelvic pressure, or persistent low backache. Bleeding is
by far the most predictive risk factor for pregnancy loss.
 Even if miscarriage does not follow threatened abortion, later adverse pregnancy outcomes are increased
 Preterm delivery
 Recurrence
 B-hCG levels: uterine pregnancy: increase by 53-66% every 48 hrs
 Progesterone concentration: <5ng/ml suggest a dying pregnancy; .>20 ng/ml support a dx of healthy one
 TVS
 Gestational sac: seen by 4.5 weeks; B-hCG 1500-2000mIU/ml
 Pseudogestational sac: blood derived from bleeding ectopic pregnancy; exclude once yolk sac is
seen
 Yolk sac: visible by 5.5 weeks and gestational sac diameter of 10mm
 Management:
 Observation
 Acetaminophen for cramping
 If anemia and hypovolemia: pregnancy evacuation; if live fetus: transfusion and observation
2.Incomplete abortion
 bleeding follows partial or complete placental separation and dilation of the cervical os
 tissue may remain entirely within the uterus or partially extrude through the cervix
 Products lying loosely within the cervical canal can be easily extracted with ring forceps
 Management
 Curettage
 expectant management or misoprostol (Cytotec) (PGEI)
 deferred in clinically unstable women or with uterine infection
 associated with unpredictable bleeding
3. Complete abortion
 complete expulsion of the entire pregnancy may and the cervical os subsequently close
 history of heavy bleeding, cramping, and passage of tissue is typical
 Patients are encouraged to bring in passed tissue; discerned from blood clots or a decidual cast.
 If an expelled complete gestational sac is not identified, transvaginal sonography is performed
 Minimally thickened endometrium without a gestational sac; does not guarantee uterine pregnancy
 Complete abortion cannot be surely diagnosed unless:
1. true products of conception are seen grossly
2. unless sonography confidently documents first an intrauterine pregnancy and then later an empty
cavity
 serial serum hCG level measurements aid clarification. Complete abortion: levels drop quickly

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