1 / 30

Family Medicine Case Presentation

Family Medicine Case Presentation. Group 7 ASMPH 2012 23 July 2010. Purpose of Presentation. Prolonged hospital stay Family of limited resources. Identifying Data.

Download Presentation

Family Medicine Case Presentation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Family MedicineCase Presentation Group 7 ASMPH 2012 23 July 2010

  2. Purpose of Presentation • Prolonged hospital stay • Family of limited resources

  3. Identifying Data • JCC is a 33 y/o, G3P3 (3003), Filipino, Roman Catholic, married woman with 2 children, with a third just delivered. She currently works as a street sweeper; lives as an informal settler near Tomas Morato. • Self-referred, moderate reliability

  4. Chief Complaint • Early post-partum abdominal pain and difficulty of breathing, s/p labored NSD

  5. History of Present Illness • Patient, 33, G3P2(2002), previous “big babies” delivered via NSD, at 40 1/7 wks AOG by LMP, consulted at the OB-ER for persistent vaginal bleeding of few hours duration.

  6. History of Present Illness • Trimestral History • 6 PNCU with 3 prev UTZs done prior to admission. • Biophysical profile done 3 days prior to admission, EFW = 3731 g; BPP score 8/8 • Abdominal Exam: • FH 31 cm, FHT 120s • Pelvic examination: • 6 cm dilated, 70% effaced, with cephalic presentation, station -3, +BOW

  7. History of Present Illness • Admitting diagnosis • PU 30 1/7 weeks AOG by LMP, CIL, G3P2 (2002); to consider arrest in descent secondary to feto-pelvic disproportion. • Patient subsequently consented for BTL

  8. History of Present Illness • While being monitored, patient was noted to be non-compliant to physician requests to do abdominal and pelvic examinations, noting direct tenderness at sites of examination. No apparent guarding in between contractions. • No tenderness above the level of the diaphragm. Able to take blood pressure and vital signs, noted to be otherwise unremarkable.

  9. History of Present Illness • During vaginal delivery of baby, patient was noted to show signs of distress, with vital signs becoming progressively unstable, with palor, hypotonia, tachycardia and tachypnea noted. Blood loss intra-partum was <300 ml. • Patient was given fluids for resuscitation and Levophed for the suspected shock

  10. History of Present Illness • Immediately post-partum, patient’s vital signs continued to show signs of instability; little improvement with subsequent decline despite initial PRBCs. CVP showed hypovolemia (~3cm). • Patient also complained of continued abdominal tenderness, with or without palpation; increasing difficulty of breathing; chest pain initially sharp but progressively becoming heavy “parang may nakadagan”

  11. History of Present Illness • Initial lab results • CBC: • RBC 2.39 x10 ^ 12 / L LOW • Hgb: 0.59 g/L LOW • Hct: 0.18 LOW • Plt: 191 Normal • WBC: 21.0 HIGH • Neutrophil 0.909 HIGH • Lymphocytes 0.047 LOW

  12. History of Present Illness • PT: 15.6s HIGH • APTT: 48.5s HIGH • Glucose: 14.36 mmol/L HIGH • Crea: 116.53 mmol/L HIGH • K+: 2.5 mmol/L LOW • Na+ & Cl- Normal • CKMB: 12 U/L HIGH • Troponin I Normal • Liver Function Test Normal

  13. History of Present Illness • Patient also repeatedly noted feeling blood dripping/flowing around her genital area, but inspection was negative for external bleeding. • About 9 hours post-partum, patient again alerted that there was blood gushing out. Inspection revealed heavy vaginal bleeding • Patient was hence rushed to the OR.

  14. Personal and Social History • Catholic • Married with 2 children • Non-Smoker, Non-Alcoholic • High school graduate • Lives as an informal settler • Main provider for family; works as a street sweeper • Other Stakeholders: Mother, husband, 2 children • Husband, 42, is illiterate; unemployed; irregular job as an electrician • Mother is 68 y/o; continues to work as a washer woman to contribute to finances; does hospital errands for JCC • 2 children 8 y/o and 6 y/o; going to school

  15. Family Genogram

  16. Other Pertinent History • PMH: Uncertain medical history; Elevated OGTT 50g perinatally. • FH: Uncertain family history; denies family history of hypertension, diabetes and/or other illnesses.

  17. Review of Systems • Generalized weakness and fatigue • Lightheadedness • Blurring/dimming of vision • Difficulty of breathing/pleuritic pain • Chest pain and subsequent heaviness • Abdominal pain, whole • Sensations of blood dripping/gushing out her vagina

  18. Physical Examination • BP – Persistent hypotension <80 mmHg systole • RR – Persistent tachypnea > 30 breaths/min • HR – Persistent tachycardia 130-160 bpm • Temp – mild fever 37.8 C axillary • General survey • Pale, weak, lethargic, coherent

  19. Physical Examination • HEENT: • Pale palpebral conjunctivae; sclerae anticteric • Pulsating neck veins; no gurgling on auscultation • No lymphadenopathy • Lungs: • Suprasternal retraction, short breaths, clear breath sounds • Heart: • Tachycardia, with occasional irregular rate; normal rhythm

  20. Physical Examination • Abdominal: • Distended and apparently enlarging abdomen • (+) fluid wave • Tympanitic on all four quadrants • Tender on all four quadrants with or without palpation • No masses felt • Extremities: • Weak pulses on all extremities; bipedal edema

  21. Assessment • Post Partum Hemorrhage secondary to Uterine Rupture, s/p NSD, Day 0; consider • Baby boy, Z, delivered live via NSD, Apgar 1

  22. Diagnostics • Constant monitoring of vital signs • BP, HR, RR, Temp., CVP • Laboratory diagnostics • CBC, platelet count, BT, serum electrolytes, CKMB, Troponin I, urinalysis • Imaging (X-ray) • ECG

  23. Therapeutic Plan • Continuous hydration with plain NSS. • Monitoring of vital signs every 30 minutes. • Serial H&H every 4 hours. • Transfusion of packed Red Blood Cells (PRBC) with hemoglobin < 70 g/L • Electrolyte correction where needed. • Immediate exploratory laparotomy with continued degradation of vital signs.

  24. Definitive Management • Serial blood tests • Blood transfusions • Exploratory laparotomy • Subtotal hysterectomy

  25. Course in the Wards • Unstable vitals requiring 4 day stay at SICU • Intubated • 2 days ambubagging; 1 day mechanical ventilator • NGT • 4 days • Intensive monitoring of vital signs and laboratory studies • On multiple antibiotics, diuretics, IV fluids • Monitoring at OB High-Risk Ward 5 days

  26. Follow-up Visits • Baby Z continued to be confined at the NICU, incubated, for 1 month post delivery • Baby Z currently still being monitored and stabilized at the nursery • JCC has not gone home, having to breast feed Baby Z every 2-3 hours • Mother S travels to and from home daily to accompany JCC and bring her food

  27. Family Assessment Tools • Genogram • Family Timeline • Family Map • Family APGAR • Family SCREEM • Family CEA • Family Meeting • Home Visit

More Related