Nausea and Vomiting
Treating Nausea and Vomiting
VTEs
More VTEs
Anticoagulation
100

How should you counsel patients regarding the risk of nausea and vomiting to their pregnancy?

No increased risk of harm or miscarriage. (Actually has been shown to be associated with an increased live birth rate.)

100

If nausea and vomiting persists after first-line therapy, what pharmacologic therapy is next recommended?

Doxylamine (Unisom) and pyridoxine (vitamin B6)

100

Please name three physiologic or anatomic changes that lead to an increased risk of VTE in pregnancy.

Hypercoagulability, increased venous stasis, decreased venous outflow, compression of the inferior vena cava, decreased mobility.

100

When is the risk of VTE highest during the course of pregnancy and postpartum?

First week after delivery.

100

What agent can be used to reverse heparin? Does it work for LMWH?

Protamine sulfate

Less predictable for LMWH

200

Please name three risk factors for developing hyperemesis gravidarum.

Increased placental mass (e.g. molar pregnancy, multiple gestation)
History of motion sickness
Migraine headaches
Family history of hyperemesis gravidarum
History of hyperemesis gravidarum in a previous pregnancy

200

What precaution(s) must you take before treating a patient with ondansetron (Zofran)? For what are you screening?

EKG to screen for QTc prolongation

200

Which inherited thrombophilias are considered low risk for VTE during pregnancy? Which ones are considered high risk?

Low risk: Factor V Leiden heterozygote, prothrombin G20210A heterozygote, protein C deficiency, protein S deficiency

High risk: Factor V Leiden homozygote, prothrombin G20210A homozygote, compound factor V Leiden and prothrombin G20210A heterozygote, antithrombin deficiency.

200

What is the most common site where DVTs are diagnosed during pregnancy?

Ileofemoral (64%).

200
Name three agents that can be used to reverse warfarin.

Vitamin K, fresh frozen plasma, prothrombin complex concentrate.

300

Please name three commonly used criteria to diagnose hyperemesis gravidarum.

- Persistent vomiting not related to other causes
- Weight loss exceeding 5% of prepregnancy body weight
- A measure of acute starvation (e.g. ketonuria, ketonemia)
- Electrolyte, thyroid, and/or liver abnormalities

300

If nausea and vomiting persists after second-line therapy, what pharmacologic therapy is next recommended?

Dimenhydrinate (Dramamine) or diphenhydramine (Benadryl) or prochlorperazine (Compazine) or or promethazine (Phenergan)

300

A patients presents to your office for her first prenatal visit. Upon reviewing her history you discover her sister was diagnosed with protein S deficiency after a lower extremity DVT. The patient underwent testing and was also found to had protein S deficiency. How should you manager her VTE risk during pregnancy? What about postpartum?


300

Please name the diagnostic criteria for antiphospholipid antibody syndrome. How should you manage their risk of VTE during pregnancy?

Obstetric APLS: Aspirin + prophylactic heparin/LMWH
Thrombotic APLS: Aspirin + therapeutic heparin/LMWH

300

When should patients continue vitamin K antagonist therapy during pregnancy?

In the setting of mechanical heart valves.

400

What precaution should you take before treating a dehydrated patient with nausea/vomiting with fluids containing dextrose? What are you trying to prevent?

Pre-treat with thiamine (vitamin B1)

Wernicke encephalopathy

400

What is first-line therapy for nausea and vomiting in pregnancy?

1. Convert prenatal vitamin to folic acid supplement only

2. Ginger capsules 250 mg qid

3. Consider P6 accupressure with wrist bands

400

If patients cannot safely take heparin products, what is the preferred anticoagulant? What is its mechanism of action?

Fondaparinux, synthetic pentasaccharide that binds to and activates antithrombin, accelerating the inhibition of factor Xa.

400

For which inherited thrombophilias is testing during pregnancy reliable? For which is it reliable while on anticoagulation?

400

According to Lactmed, how should patients who were dabigatran be counseled regarding breastfeeding? Rivaroxaban? Apixaban?

Dabigatran and rivaroxaban are poorly secreted into breastmilk and continuation is reasonable. 

Apixaban is secreted at high levels into breastmilk so patients should avoid it while breastfeeding.

500

What recently discovered hormone been linked to maternal hyperemesis gravidarum?

Growth differentiation factor-15 (GDF-15)

 

500

If you have a patient with dehydration whose nausea and vomiting is refractory to IV antiemetics and you want to try corticosteroid therapy, what corticosteroid should you try? How much and how frequently? If it works, over how long should you taper?

Methylprednisolone 16 mg q8h, orally or IV, for 3 days. Taper over 2 weeks to lowest effective dose, limit therapy to 6 weeks total.

500

What are the differences between HIT types 1 and 2?

HIT type I (HIT I) is a mild, transient drop in platelet count that typically occurs within the first two days of heparin exposure. 

HIT type II (HIT II) is a clinically significant syndrome due to antibodies to platelet factor 4 (PF4) complexed to heparin, referred to as "HIT antibodies" or "PF4/heparin antibodies" 

500

Does helical CT or ventilation perfusion scanning convey lower radiation exposure to the fetus?

Which provides lower radiation exposure to the maternal breasts?

Helical CT has lower fetal exposure (0.0033-0.02 mGy vs 0.32-0.64). 

Ventilation perfusion scanning has lower breast radiation exposure.

500

What agent can you use to reverse rivaroxaban? Apixaban? Dabigatran?

Apixaban and rivaroxaban: Recombinant coagulation factor Xa andexanet alpha (AndexXa).

Dabigatran: Idarucizumab (Praxbind).