Preterm Premature Rupture of Membranes (PPROM)

You might also like

Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 16

Preterm premature rupture of membranes (PPROM)

Diagnosis, evaluation and management strategies


Supplement-BJOG March 2005

Introduction

Definition:

PROM: Rupture of amniotic membranes with release of AF > 1 hour prior to labor onset PPROM: PROM prior to 37 weeks of gestation

complicates 3% of pregnancies and of preterm births.

Diagnosis

Effective treatment relies on accurate diagnosis: clinical suspicion patient history simple testing Patient history 90 % accurate

Evaluation- tests
Ferning test

Midvaginal/ posterior fornix fluid Air dry for 10 mints Cervical mucous can cause false +ve Ferning unaffected by meconium, changes in pH, blood in small amount

Evaluation- tests

Nitrazine test: Can be altered by contaminants in vaginal pool (BV, cervicitis, semen, blood cause false +ve)

Avoid digital examination as latency shortened significantly: 2studies; Lewis et al, Alexander et al

PPROM- causes

Intrauterine infection; A major factor implicated in PPROM Others; Membrane stretch Abruption membranes collagen content degradation of collagen

Infection and PPROM

Subclinical in majority-no overt chorioamnionitis Upto 40% culture positivity using transabdominal amniocentesis Adverse outcome to newborn and during infancy Need to establish infection earlydelivery

Infection.

A.F. culture Definitive, but takes 48 hours More rapid tests; Gram stain W.B.C. count Leucocyte esterase assay Glucose concentration Combined-(any 1 test +ve) has a PPV of 66% and a NPV of 80%.

Management

Gestational age, fetal maturity are primary determining factors Gest. Age at which delivery is promotedneonatal care? Conservative management; Advantage; morbidity/mortality Risk; cord prolapse, abruption, infection, emergency procedures

Tocolytics in PPROM

Limited value Christensen et al-RCT (Ritrodrine vs. Placebo). Latency prolonged by 24 hours Levy and Warsof- of latency (47%) in treated against untreated(14%) No place for prophylactic tocolysis beyond 48 hours steroids) Review the need to deliver abruption, infection, fetal distress)

Corticosteroids

Ante partum-reduce perinatal morbidity/mortality Betamethazone (2 doses 12mg IM, 24 hours apart) Dexamethazone (4 doses 6mg IM, 12 hours apart)
National Institute of health-1994

No evidence of neonatal infection (Lewis) Repeated courses-Not recommended

Antibiotics

Antimicrobial action + modulation of inflammatory response (maternal, fetal) Different regimes-type of antibiotic, route, duration IV Ampicillin + Erythromycin for 48 hours followed by oral for 1 weekNICHD study. Reduction of risk of death, RDS, sepsis, IVH and severe NEC.

Lung maturity assessment

By Amniocentesis 32-34 weeks window Study- Cotton et alFetal distress more frequent in no Amniocentesis group Amniostat-FLM
Simple slide agglutination test Vaginal pool-not affected by blood / meconium PPV 95-100% NPV 35-51%

Lung Maturity cont.

TDX-FLM Reliable, reproducible Uses fluorescent polarization assay technique Expectant management involves fetal surveillance-NST, BPP

Conclusion

PPROM remains a commonly encountered clinical problem Significant health costs Management depends on accurate diagnosis and determination of gestational age. Antibiotics and corticosteroids have clear benefits >34 weeks-benefit of delivery outweigh risks.

You might also like