Title: Method for Induced Abortion
1Method for Induced Abortion
- OBSTETRICS GYNECOLOGY
- Volume 104, Number 1, July 2004
- R3 ???
2- First trimester abortion
- Vacuum curettage
- Complications of vacuum curettage abortion
- Medical abortion in the first trimester
- Complications of early medical abortion
- Second trimester abortion
- Dilation and evacuation
- Complications of dilation and evacuation
- Labor induction methods
- Fetal death in utero
- Selective fetal reduction
3Methods for abortion in the first trimester
4Vacuum curettage
- The most common method of abortion in the United
States - Before 13 weeks suction or vacuum curettage
- After 13 weeks dilation and evacuation (DE)
- Antibiotics
- Marked reduction in postabortal infection
- Tetracycline, doxycycline, minocycline
- broad spectrum of antimicrobial effect
- oral absorption
5Vacuum curettage
- Pain relief
- Paracervical block
- 10-20mL of 1 lidocaine
- Deep injection into the cervical stroma at
multiple site - Addition of 2-4 units of vasopressin to the
anesthetic solution - -gt reduces blood loss
- -gt prevent postabortal uterine atony
- Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
- Preoperative administration -gt modest reduction
in pain - Conscious sedation
- Intravenous midazolam 1-3mg and fentanyl 50-100ug
6Vacuum curettage
- The necessary dilatation of the cervix
- Mechanical cervical dilation with tapered
cervical dilators - Hygroscopic dilators laminaria
- Reduces risk for perforation or cervical
laceration - Prostaglandins misoprostol
- 400ug vaginal dose, 3-4 hours before procedure
- Minimal side effects, little expense
7Vacuum curettage
- For complete abortion and early diagnosis of
ectopic pregnancy - Preoperative ultrasonography
- Careful inspection of the aborted tissue
- Follow up with serial hCG titer
- Manual vacuum aspiration
- 6mm flexible cannula and modifed 60ml syringe
- Effective in pregnancies as early as 3 weeks
- As safe and effective as electric vacuum through
10weeks of pregnancy - Used to treat Incomplete spontaneous abortion in
office or emergency room
8Complications of vacuum curettage
- - Immediate complications -
- Excessive bleeding
- Cause
- Incomplete abortion
- Pregnancy of more advanced gestational age than
expected - Uterine atony
- Low-lying implantation
- Uterine injury
- Management
- Misoprostol 1000ug, rectally or buccally
- 30ml balloon Foley catheter inserted into the
uterine cavity, inflated with 50-60ml of sterile
saline
9Complications of vacuum curettage
- Persistent postabortal bleeding
- Cause
- Retained tissue or clot (hematometra)
- Trauma
- Management
- Prompt surgical intervention
- laparoscopy
- repeat vacuum curettage
- Selective uterine artery embolization
- Rarely, hysterectomy
10Complications of vacuum curettage
- Uterine perforation
- Risk
- 1 in 1000 first trimester abortion
- Increases with gestational age, parous women
- Perforations at the junction of the cervix and
lower uterine segment - lacerate the ascending branch of the uterine
artery within the broad ligament - severe pain, broad ligament hematoma,
intra-abdominal bleeding - laparotomy to ligate the severed vessels and
repair the uterine injury
11Complications of vacuum curettage
- Low cervical perforation
- Injure the descending branch of the uterine
artery within the cardinal ligaments - The bleeding is external, through the cervical
canal - -gt subside temporarily as the artery goes into
spasm - -gt no intra-abdominal bleeding
- Management
- Hysterectomy
- Arteriography and selective uterine artery
embolization
12Complications of vacuum curettage
- Hematometra
- Symptom sign
- Lower abdominal pain
- increasing intensity in the hour after an
abortion - Large, globular, tense uterus
- Management
- Immediate re-evacuation
- Pretreatment with ergot 0.1mg IM, the use of
oxytocin - Addition of vasopressin to the paracervical
anesthetic
13Complications of vacuum curettage
- Early detection of ectopic pregnancy, incomplete
abortion - Immediate fresh examination of the specimen
- The gestational sac, chorionic villi are easily
visualized - If no chorionic tissue
- Frozen section to rule out ectopic pregnancy
- A few villi but no gestational sac
- Retained pregnancy tissue in the uterus
14Complications of vacuum curettage
- - Later complication -
- Retained tissue or clot early endometritis
- Symptom sign
- ? No response to simple analgesics
- ? Excessive and prolonged bleeding
- ? Severe pain or fever
- Management
- ? Broad spectrum oral antibiotics
- ? Vacuum evacuation in the clinic
15Complications of vacuum curettage
- Advanced sepsis
- Symptom sign
- ? generalized abdominal tenderness guarding
- ? tachycardia
- ? significant fever
- ? prostration
- Management
- ? immediate hospital care
- ? prompt uterine evacuation
- ? high dose combinations of antibiotics
- ? intensive care for cardiovascular support
with - fluid resuscitation, monitoring with
central lines
16Medical abortion in the first trimester
- Three highly effective regimens
- Mifeprostone (RU-486) misoprostol
- Methortexate misoprostol
- Misoprostol alone
17Medical abortion in the first trimester
- Mifepristone prostaglandin analogue
- The first highly effective means
- Mifeprostone
- analogue of norethindrone
- high affinity for progesterone receptors
- -gt act as a false transmitter and blocks
natural - progesterone
- Effectiveness
- increased to approximately 95 by the
addition of low- - dose prostaglandin
18Medical abortion in the first trimester
- The U.S FDA
- Mifepristone 600mg orally, followed by
- misoprostol 400ug orally 2days later
- Use is limited to the first 49days of
amenorrhea - Evidence-based protocol
- Mifeprostone 200mg orally, followed by self-
- administered vaginal misoprostol 800ug at
home - Vaginal misoprostol -gt lower peak
serum level, more sustained blood level - -gt administered at 24,48,72 hours after the
mifeprisotne - (no difference in efficacy)
- The effective gestational age can be safely
- extended from 49 to 63 days of amenorrhea
19Medical abortion in the first trimester
- Methotrexate misoprostol
- Regimen
- Methotrexate 50mg/m2 single intramuscular
dose, - followed vaginal imsoprostol 800ug at 3-7days
- Expulsion of the gestational sac has not
occurred - -gt Misoprostol is repeated in 24hours
- Effectiveness
- 53 aborted after the first dose of
misoprostol, - additional 15 after the second dose,
- total of 92 by 35 days
20Medical abortion in the first trimester
- Misoprostol alone
- Regimen
- Vaginal misoprostol 800ug initially,
followed by - 800ug at 24 hours, if needed
- Effectiveness
- Complete abortion rate 92
- As effective as mifepristone/misoprostol and
- much less expensive
21Medical abortion in the first trimester
- Vaginal ultrasonography after start of medical
abortion - Performed to ensure that the uterine cavity is
empty - Intact gestation with cardiac echoes 2weeks after
start of medication -gt failed abortion - Gestational sac is present but no fetal cardiac
activity - -gt wait for expulsion, take more misoprostol
- -gt have surgical evacuation
- If medical abortion fails, surgical termination
is advisable - possible risk for fetal malformation from
misoprostol and - methotrexate
22Complications of early medical abortion
- Persistent bleeding
- The duration of bleeding or spotting
- 9-16 days after mifeprisotne/ misoprostol
- up to 8 as long as 30 days
- Need for curettage is related to gestational age
- ( 200mg mifepristone 800ug vaginal
misoprostol ) - 2.1 at 49 days or less
- 3.1 at 50-56 days
- 5.1 at 57-63 days
23Complications of early medical abortion
- Hausknecht the complications report
- ( November 2000 to May 2002, 80,000 women who
received - mifepristone )
- Vacuum curettage for bleeding or for persistent
non-viable pregnancy - A death of a woman with a ruptured ectopic
pregnancy - Infection (0.013)
- Sepsis with adult respiratory distress syndrome
- Coronary artery thrombosis
24Second-trimester abortion
25Dilation and Evacuation
- Dilation of the cervix
- Laminaria method
- Prevailed because of
- ? concerns about cervical injury for mechanical
dilation - ? the greater technical ease of
second-trimester - procedures
- More laminaria are used as gestational age
- ? After 20 weeks -gt 10 more laminaria
- ? 10-13 laminaria at 20-23 weeks
- -gt greater than 14mm
by the next day -
26Dilation and Evacuation
- Method
- ? Initial set of 2-3 medium laminaria
- ? 4 or more new laminaria to the first set 6
hours later - ? Dilatations of 18 mm or more by the next day in
92 - Misoprostol treatment
- Replace laminaria in the early second
trimester - method
- ? 600ug administered buccally
- ? 2-4 hours before procedure
- ? At 14-16 weeks of gestation
- ? Sufficient dilation to allow insertion of a
14mm vacuum - curette
27Dilation and Evacuation
- Instrument technique
- At 13-15 weeks
- Readily evacuation with vacuum cannula of
12-14mm - -gt Ovum forceps (as an adjunct)
- The surgeon may prefer to use forceps as the
primary and - use the vacuum only the end of the procedure
- Through 16 weeks
- The 16mm cannula system, vacuum curette
alone - At 17 weeks and beyond
- Even large diameter aspiration system is not
adequate by - itself
- Forceps evacuation ,the primary method and
- vacuum, the secondary method
28Dilation and Evacuation
- Decrease of blood loss
- Intravenous oxytocin
- 40 or more units per 1000mL
- During the procedure or begun after uterine
- evacuation is completed
- Vasopressin
- Two to four units mixed with the local
anesthetic - solution
- Diluted with 10-20mL sterile saline
- Injected into the cervix
29Dilation and Evacuation
- The patients
- The obese patient
- Increased procedure difficulty, procedure
time, - blood loss with increasing body mass index
- BMI greater than 30
- -gt 20 longer time for procedure
- -gt 40 more difficult by the operator
- Placenta previa
- Not a contraindication to laminaria with DE
- Previous cesarean delivery
- Not increase perioperative risk of DE
30Dilation and Evacuation
- Intact DE procedure
- ? 2 or more days of laminaria treatment to obtain
wide dilation of the cervix - ? Assisted breech delivery of the trunk of the
fetus, - under ultrasound guidance
- ? The calvarium is decompressed
- ? Delivered with the fetus otherwise intact
31Dilation and Evacuation
- Combination DE technique
- ? After multistage laminaria treatment over 2 or
- more days
- ? 1.5-2.0mg of digoxin are injected into the
fetus - under ultrasound guidance
- ? The membranes are ruptured
- ? Intravenous oxytocin is started (167mU/min)
- ? Assisted delivery is performed after a few hours
32Complications of dilation and evacuation
- The same as first-trimester surgical abortion
- no more frequent when laminaria are used
- Perforation
- 0.32 for DE at 13-20 weeks
- but, 0.05 with first-trimester vacuum
curettage - Lead to bowel injury and require laparotomy
- but, safely managed with laparoscopy with first
trimester
33Complications of dilation and evacuation
- Hemorrhage
- Caused by incomplete procedure, uterine atony,
trauma (as in the first trimester) - At the later gestational ages, risk for DIC
increases - 8 / 100,000 first trimester
- 191 / 100,000 second trimester
- Amniotic fluid embolism
- Rare and less frequent with vacuum curettage and
DE than with labor induction technique - Must be considered when a patient exhibits
respiratory difficulty while undergoing an
abortion
34Labor induction methods
- Hypertonic solution
- Intra-amniotic hypertonic saline
- The first effective labor induction method
for - second trimester abortion
- Hypertonic urea
- Potentially safer agent
- gt intravascular injection would not be harmful
- Intra-amniotic dose of 80-90g is effective
- injection-to-abortion intervals are
prolonged
35Labor induction methods
- Intra-amniotic prostaglandin F²a
- Effective, but often required a second injection
- Associate with
- Transient fetal survival in some cases
- Significant gastrointestinal side effects
- Failure of the primary technique
- Risk for cervical rupture, in the
primigravida - Overnight treatment with laminaria tents reduced
- The mean time from instillation to abortion
from - 29 hours to 14 hours
- The need for second injections
36Labor induction methods
- Systemic prostaglandins
- Three different prostaglandis
- ? Dinoprostone (prostaglandin E2)
-
- ? Carboprost tromethamine (Hemabate)
-
- ? Misoprostol
37Labor induction methods
- Dinoprostone
- 20mg vaginal suppository every 3 hours
- The mean time to abortion 13.4 hours
- 90 aborting by 24 hours
- Reducing the dinoprostone to 10mg at 6 hour
intervals combined with high-dose oxytocin - -gt the same efficacy but fewer
gastrointestinal side - effects
- Carboprost tromethamine
- 250ug every 2 hours intramuscular injection
- The mean time to abortion 15-17 hours
- About 80 aborting by 24 hours
38Labor induction methods
- Misoprostol
- The ideal dose and interval is still under
investigation - 200ug vaginally every 12 hours
- Equally effective with dinoprostone 20mg
every 3 hours - Fewer side effects (vomiting, diarrhea,
fever) - 200ug, 400ug, 600ug at 12 hour intervals
- Abortion by 48 hours to be 70.6, 82, 96
- Vomiting, diarrhea, fever increased with the
dose - High doses and short intervals
- increase risk for uterine rupture
- 3 case of uterine rupture with previous
cesarean delivery
39Labor induction methods
- Mifepristone and prostaglandins
- Method
- ? Mifepristone is administered
- ? 3 days later the patient is hospitalized for
- prostaglandin treatment
- (gemeprost, misoprostol)
- Typical intervals from start of the prostaglandin
to abortion 7-9 hours - Recent studies use misoprostol more often
- low cost and high efficacy
40Labor induction methods
- High dose oxytocin
- Method
- ? 50 units in 500mL of 5 dextrose and normal
- saline given over 3 hour period
- ? After 1 hour rest
- ? Oxytocin infusion is repeated, adding 50
- additional units to the next 500mL
infusuon, - continuing with 3 hour
- ? And 1 hour of rest
- ? Repeat until the patient aborts or a final
solution - of 300 units of oxytocin in 500mL is reached
41Labor induction methods
- Use of feticidal agents
- Feticidal agents
- reduces the induction to abortion interval and
improve efficacy - Method
- ? 60mL of 23 saline solution
- ? Intra-amniotic urea
- ? Ultrasound guided fetal intra-cardiac
injection - of potassium chloride
- ? 1.0-1.5mg of digoxin given
- ultrasound-directed intrafetal
injection - into the amniotic sac
42Labor induction methods
- Hysterotomy and hysterectomy
- Little indication as the primary method for
abortion - because the risk of major complications and
- death is greater than for any other
technique - The only need for hysterotomy in failed abortion
- uterine anomaly
43Fetal death in utero
- Vaginal Prostaglandine E2
- Highly effective after fetal death
- Producing fetal abortion in about 10 hours
- Side effect vomiting, diarrhea, fever
- Beyond 24 weeks, the full dose of 20mg should not
be used -gt uterine rupture - Misoprostol
- Increasingly used to manage fetal death
- Vaginal 200ug at 12 hour intervals
- Safe and effective in the second trimester
- The dose should be reduced in the third trimester
- Initial dose of 25ug at 6 hour intervals
- Increasing to a maximum of 50ug at 6 hour
intervals
44Fetal death in utero
- Hemorrhage begun after abortion
- -gt DIC should be suspected
- If the uterus appears intact on manual
exploration -
- ? intramuscular carboprost, immediately
- stop the bleeding, even in the presence
of DIC - reduce the need for blood products
- ? misoprostol 1000ug rectally
- used successfully for postpartum
hemorrhage
45Selective fetal reduction
- Method
- US guided intra-cardiac injection of potassium
- Indication
- Multiple pregnancy, to avoid the risk of extreme
prematurity for the surviving pregnancies - One anomalous fetus of multifetal gestation
- Contraindication
- Monoamniotic twins
- Twin-twin transfusion syndrome
- -gt embolic phenomena
- -gt infarction in the surviving twin
46Selective fetal reduction
- Fetal loss
- Higher with higher starting numbers of gestations
- ? Starting number gt 6 -gt 15.4
- ? Starting numbers 2 -gt 6.2
- Higher if more fetuses were left intact
- ? Finishing number 3 -gt 18.4
- ? Finishing number 1 -gt 6.7