Obstetrical Emergencies

Key Points

  • Obstetrical emergencies can occur suddenly in routine labor and require immediate coordinated response.
  • Key emergencies include shoulder dystocia, cord prolapse, uterine rupture, and severe fetal compromise patterns.
  • Nursing actions are algorithmic: recognize fast, call for help, initiate first-line maneuvers, and prepare definitive delivery.

Pathophysiology

Obstetrical emergencies involve abrupt interruption of fetal oxygen transfer, severe maternal hemorrhage risk, or catastrophic maternal-fetal instability. Without rapid intervention, compromise can progress within minutes to permanent injury or death.

Emergency patterns vary in mechanism but share a common response requirement: immediate recognition, coordinated team activation, and protocolized intervention with continuous reassessment.

Classification

  • Mechanical emergencies: Shoulder dystocia and umbilical cord prolapse.
  • Uterine integrity emergency: Uterine rupture with rapid hemorrhage/fetal compromise risk.
  • Maternal-fetal oxygenation emergency: Severe fetal distress and nonreassuring tracing progression.
  • Hemostatic/systemic emergencies: DIC and severe obstetric hemorrhage syndromes.

Nursing Assessment

NCLEX Focus

Priority questions focus on the first bedside action before definitive provider intervention is completed.

  • Identify emergency cues immediately from tracing, exam findings, and maternal symptoms.
  • Assess for cord prolapse when prolonged deceleration follows membrane rupture.
  • Monitor for uterine rupture warning patterns, including abrupt tracing loss and maternal instability.
  • Track hemorrhage and coagulation-related signs that suggest evolving DIC or shock.

Nursing Interventions

  • Activate emergency team support at the first high-risk trigger.
  • For cord prolapse, relieve presenting-part compression and maintain manual elevation until delivery.
  • For shoulder dystocia, execute team maneuver sequence rapidly and document timing/actions.
  • Prepare emergent cesarean pathway and blood-product support when rupture or severe instability is suspected.

Minutes-Matter Emergencies

Delayed emergency recognition or delayed team activation in obstetrical crises can cause irreversible maternal-fetal harm.

Pharmacology

Drug ClassExamplesKey Nursing Considerations
uterotonicsHemorrhage/atony contextsUsed rapidly when postpartum bleeding mechanisms are involved.
blood-productsMassive-bleeding contextEarly preparation and protocol activation improve survival in hemorrhagic emergencies.

Clinical Judgment Application

Clinical Scenario

After spontaneous membrane rupture, fetal heart tracing shows prolonged deceleration and cord prolapse is palpated.

Recognize Cues: Acute prolonged deceleration with confirmed cord compression. Analyze Cues: Immediate fetal oxygen interruption requires urgent decompression and expedited delivery. Prioritize Hypotheses: Highest priority is restoring perfusion while preparing definitive birth. Generate Solutions: Call emergency team, elevate presenting part, optimize maternal position, and prep OR. Take Action: Maintain decompression continuously until delivery. Evaluate Outcomes: Fetal status improves or immediate operative birth proceeds without delay.

Self-Check

  1. Which immediate nursing action is critical when cord prolapse is suspected?
  2. How can uterine rupture present differently from routine labor pain progression?
  3. Why do emergency drills improve obstetrical outcomes?