Uterine Rupture in a Tertiary Hospital North Central Nigeria: Unending Maternal Tragedy

Page 1

Ochima O and Tivkaa DT, J Reprod Med Gynecol Obstet 2020, 5: 049 DOI: 10.24966/RMGO-2574/100049

HSOA Journal of Reproductive Medicine, Gynaecology & Obstetrics Research Article

Uterine Rupture in a Tertiary Hospital North Central Nigeria: Unending Maternal Tragedy Ochima Onazi* and Tivkaa David Terna Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Federal medical Centre, Keffi, Nigeria

Abstract Uterine rupture is an obstetric emergency with unacceptably high perinatal and maternal morbidity and mortality especially in areas with poorly developed maternal and child health care services. Timely recognition, adequate resuscitation and appropriate intervention are keys in reducing the negative impacts. The study was to determine the incidence, patient’s socio-demographic characteristics, possible risk factors and feto-maternal outcome of uterine rupture at Federal Medical centre Keffi North Central Nigeria. This was a 4-year retrospective review of all cases of uterine rupture seen and managed at Federal Medical Centre Keffi between 1st January 2016 and 31st December 2019. Relevant information were extracted and analysed from the hospital electronic medical records in both Labour ward and Maternity theatre. Results were presented in tables, percentages and charts. There were a total of 37 cases of uterine rupture out of 5288 deliveries giving a prevalence rate of 0.7% or 1 in 143 deliveries. Majority (81.1%) of the patients were aged 2034 years and 73% were multiparous. 18 (48.6%) patients had scar uterus mostly previous caesarean section (94.4%) and well over half (59.5%) of the patients were un booked. Only 12 (32.4%) of the patients gave a history of use of utero-tonics. The commonest site of rupture was anterior (62.2%). All patients had laparatomy during which 20 (54.1%) had uterine repair only, 11 (29.7%) had uterine repair plus BTL and 6 (16.2%) had emergency abdominal hysterectomy for uncontrollable haemorrhage. Majority of the patients (89.2%) had primary postpartum haemorrhage necessitating blood transfusion in all but 4 of the patients. A case of maternal mortality was recorded. The perinatal mortality rate was 86.5%. Conclusion: Uterine rupture remains a significant health risk to our

*Corresponding author: Ochima Onazi, Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Federal medical Centre, Keffi, Nigeria, Tel: +234 8036313556; E-mail: otsima179@gmail.com Citation: Ochima O, Tivkaa DT (2020) Uterine Rupture in a Tertiary Hospital North Central Nigeria: Unending Maternal Tragedy. J Reprod Med Gynecol Obstet 5: 049. Received: May 08, 2020; Accepted: May 19, 2020; Published: May 26, 2020

Copyright: Š 2020 Ochima O, et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

women during child birth despite advances in medical science and health care services. Keywords: Fetomaternal outcome; Risk factors; Scar uterus; Uterine rupture

Introduction Uterine rupture is a life threatening complication of pregnancy and child birth with un-acceptably high perinatal and maternal morbidity and mortality [1]. Timely recognition, adequate resuscitation and appropriate interventions are cardinal to successful outcome. The impact can be far reaching especially in areas with absent or poorly developed maternal and child health care services. Uterine rupture and its squeal can be devastating not only to the woman and her family but to the clinician and the society. It is often a reflection of the poor quality of obstetric care in particular and the deplorable state of health care delivery in a society in general. Uterine rupture may involve separation of the entire thickness of the walls of the uterus (complete) or sparing the visceral peritoneum (partial rupture) [2]. With complete rupture, the foetus may be partly or wholly extruded into the peritoneal cavity making foetal salvage rate dismal [3]. Foetal compromise is usually due to hypoxia or/and maternal hypovolemia from excessive haemorrhage. While the incidence and case fatality is low in developed countries the opposite is true for developing countries with rising incidence and case fatality partly due to prolonged obstructed labour, very deplorable health care services occasioned by long standing neglect by relevant authorities, dismal health care financing, poverty, women aversion to early and timely operative interventions, un-regulated activities of unskilled birth attendants and inappropriate use of uterotonics [4,5]. Globally the incidence of uterine rupture is low, 1 in 1416 (0.07%) pregnancies, the incidence among women with unscarred uteri in developed countries is even lower1 in 8434 (0.012%) however there is an 8 fold increase incidence of 0.11% (1 in 920) in developing countries [6]. In Nigeria reported rates of uterine rupture are 1 in 164 (0.61%), 1 in 172 (0.58%), 1 in 103 (0.97%), 1 in 210 (0.47%) and 1 in 117 (0.85%) deliveries in Lagos, Benin city, Enugu, Ilorin and Abuja respectively [7-11]. Common predisposing factors to uterine rupture includes: neglected obstructed labour, grandmultparity, scarred uterus, women aversion to early and timely operative deliveries which is seen as obstetric failure fuelled by ignorance and illiteracy, others are uterine instrumentation, blunt abdominal trauma and inappropriate use of uterotonics [12]. Some of the known foetal complications include need for admission to neonatal intensive care unit, foetal hypoxia and neonatal death while obstetric haemorrhage, hypovolemic shock, hysterectomy and death are maternal complications especially when cases presents late and medical care is suboptimal.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.