Placenta Previa

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Study Tools For Placenta Previa

Placenta Previa (Image)
Placenta in Uterus (Image)
Placenta Previa (Picmonic)
Abruption vs Previa (Cheatsheet)
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Outline

Overview

  1. Placenta is improperly implanted in the uterus and covers the cervix

Nursing Points

General

  1. The placenta is usually implanted at the top or side portion of the uterus
  2. Placenta previa is when the placenta covers the cervix
    1. Complete – cervix is completely covered
    2. Partial – not fully covering the cervix
    3. Marginal – on the edge of the cervix

Assessment

  1. Painless, bright red vaginal bleeding
    1. How much?
  2. Placenta location assessed on ultrasound

Therapeutic Management

  1. Vaginal exams are contraindicated
  2. How it is managed depends on age of fetus, degree of placenta previa and if the fetus or mother are in distress
    1. If it’s marginal, vaginal delivery can be attempted
    2. C-section may be indicated otherwise

Nursing Concepts

  1. Perfusion
  2. Safety

Patient Education

  1. Report any vaginal bleeding to provider
  2. May require bed rest in later weeks for known previa

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Transcript

In this lesson I will explain placenta previa, what it means for the patient and your role in the care.

So where is the placenta supposed to be? The placenta is supposed to be implanted in the uterus at the fundus but in previa it is implanted wrong. It is in the lower portion. It can be complete where it covers the cervix completely. Partial is where it covers part of the cervix and marginal is where it is right on the edge of the cervix. You can see in this image the cervix is completely covered. This is a complete previa. Partial would be over part of the cervix and marginal would be over to the side.
Now let’s look at the assessment. There is painless, bright red vaginal bleeding. We need to know how much. So we can ask the patient how many pads have you changed. Remember this is painless bleeding where an abruption is painful so the patient might not be complaining as much. In addition to asking how many pads we can ask about when it started and the consistency of it. Placenta location is assessed on ultrasound. We have to see where the location is located. Is it in the upper uterus at the fundus where it should be? Is it completely covering the cervix. Is it marginal or partial?
Our management for this patient will involve a few things. First of all vaginal exams are contraindicated. We don’t want to have a hand in there irritated the cervix and causing more bleeding, right? So contraindicated. Monitoring of the bleeding amount and maternal vitals as well as fetal heart rate are done. There are times that we have patients that are on our unit for a week or more being watched for bleeding. So they stay in a bed and pad counts and weights are done to see the amount of blood loss. Fetal heart rate assessment is watched while they are on the unit and if at any moment something goes wrong then that is it. We are done monitoring and they are going to the OR for an emergent delivery. So sometimes that happens and other times we have patients that are on the unit being watched and then the bleeding slows down and resolves and they get to go home. So our other management will depend on how this looks and the degree of the previa. So delivery by cesarean is our most likely method if it is complete or partial previa. If it is only marginal then they might attempt a vaginal delivery. You should just focus on remembering cesarean section for delivery because it is the most likely and safest. If it is in a test question it is there for a reason so c-section for delivery.
Education for this patient will involve having the patient report any bleeding. She might need to come in for monitoring of the bleeding. Nurses will measure the bleeding to assess the loss. So they will weigh the bloody pads. 1 gm equals 1 ml of blood loss. This is how they quantify how much is lost. Bed rest may also be required for this patient to help slow the bleeding.
Our concepts are perfusion and safety. There is a concern of perfusion to the fetus with the blood loss occurring and the fetus not getting all the nutrients and some of the life line is being shed and of course safety of mom and baby with the blood loss.
Ok what have we learned about placenta previa? It is when the placenta attaches low in the the uterus which is the wrong place! It is supposed to attach towards the top. In previa it is too low and, sometimes covers the cervix. The patient’s symptoms will be painless bleeding! This will not hurt, Since the placenta is low delivery is by c-section usually. So if that placenta is completely cover the cervix we can not do a vaginal delivery because we don’t want the placenta, the life line to deliver before the baby!

Make sure you check out the resources attached to this lesson and compare this with placental abruption because these two can get confused by their symptoms. Now, go out and be your best selves today. And, as always, happy nursing.

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Study Plan Lessons

Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Heart Failure (CHF)
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology of Myocardial Infarction (MI)
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology of Acute Kidney (Renal) Injury (AKI)
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology of Diabetes Mellitus (DM)
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Hemorrhagic Stroke (CVA)
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology of COPD (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease)
Preeclampsia: Signs, Symptoms, Nursing Care, and Magnesium Sulfate
Postpartum Hemorrhage (PPH)
Pediatric Gastrointestinal Dysfunction – Diarrhea
Fractures
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Anemia
Asthma
Advance Directives
Legal Considerations
HIPAA
Brief CPR (Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation) Overview
Fire and Electrical Safety
Fall and Injury Prevention
Isolation Precaution Types (PPE)
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs in Nursing
Delegation
Prioritization
Triage
Overview of the Nursing Process
Therapeutic Communication
Defense Mechanisms
Abuse
Patient Positioning
Complications of Immobility
Urinary Elimination
Bowel Elimination
Pain and Nonpharmacological Comfort Measures
Hygiene
Overview of Developmental Theories
Intake and Output (I&O)
Blood Glucose Monitoring
Specialty Diets (Nutrition)
Enteral & Parenteral Nutrition (Diet, TPN)
Head to Toe Nursing Assessment (Physical Exam)
Menstrual Cycle
Family Planning & Contraception
Gestation & Nägele’s Rule: Estimating Due Dates
Gravidity and Parity (G&Ps, GTPAL)
Fundal Height Assessment for Nurses
Maternal Risk Factors
Physiological Changes
Discomforts of Pregnancy
Antepartum Testing
Nutrition in Pregnancy
Chorioamnionitis
Gestational Diabetes (GDM)
Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC)
Ectopic Pregnancy
Hydatidiform Mole (Molar pregnancy)
Gestational HTN (Hypertension)
Infections in Pregnancy
Fetal Development
Fetal Environment
Fetal Circulation
Process of Labor
Mechanisms of Labor
Leopold Maneuvers
Fetal Heart Monitoring (FHM)
Prolapsed Umbilical Cord
Placenta Previa
Abruptio Placentae (Placental abruption)
Preterm Labor
Precipitous Labor
Dystocia
Postpartum Physiological Maternal Changes
Postpartum Discomforts
Breastfeeding
Mastitis
Initial Care of the Newborn (APGAR)
Newborn Physical Exam
Body System Assessments
Newborn Reflexes
Babies by Term
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Transient Tachypnea of Newborn
Hyperbilirubinemia (Jaundice)
Newborn of HIV+ Mother
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