Read Oxford Handbook of Midwifery Online
Authors: Janet Medforth,Sue Battersby,Maggie Evans,Beverley Marsh,Angela Walker
Mild hypertensive disorder
A pregnant woman with mild hypertensive disorder may be admitted labouring to the delivery suite. On admission:
consultant care, and liaise with the obstetric registrar.
>150mmHg systolic or >100mmHg diastolic requires treatment. Discuss this with the obstetrician.
During established labour
Avoid active second-stage pushing, which may affect blood pressure. Allow descent of the fetal head to the perineum then encourage spontaneous efforts at pushing.
Avoid ergometrine/Syntometrine
®
for the third stage of labour. It may aggravate hypertension. Syntocinon
®
10IU IM is preferred.
CHAPTER 18
High-risk labour
334
Pre-eclampsia
gives a more accurate reading than an automated machine, which sometimes under-records hypertension)
Maternal assessment
Observe the signs of pre-eclampsia:
>300mg/24h suggests that the woman is at risk.
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obstetrician. Site large-bore IV access, take and dispatch the required
samples for:
A low count indicates anaemia
Fetal assessment
Maternal and fetal assessment by the obstetrician
The obstetrician will:
pre-eclampsia the reflexes are brisk (clonus), there may be difficulty in focusing and papilloedema may be present
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High-risk labour
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Maternal monitoring, management, and treatment
Monitor blood pressure every 15min. Aim to achieve a slow reduction in both systolic and diastolic blood pressure and stabilize. The blood pres- sure must be stable before a decision about delivery is made.
•
Oral labetalol, a B-blocker, may be prescribed in milder cases.
fall by 10mmHg within 1h. If the response is positive and adequate, maintain the dose orally: 200mg three times a day. 1200mg daily is maximum dose.
>160/110mmHg after 30min the consultant may prescribe a further 10mg orally.
In all circumstances, follow the instructions of the medical staff carefully, and abide by local protocols.
IV antihypertensive drugs may cause fetal compromise if the blood pressure is reduced too rapidly. Monitor the fetal heart rate continuously. Monitor the woman’s progress and report any side-effects or changes in condition to the obstetrician. Note that lowering the BP may mask
symptoms and does not remove the risk of eclampsia.
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