First-Trimester Emergencies
A Practical Approach To Abdominal Pain And Vaginal Bleeding In Early Pregnancy
- Dart, Robert MD
- Blaivas, Michael MD, RDMS
- Kaplan, Jay MD, FACEP
The paramedic radio goes off. Paramedics report that they have a 25-year-old pregnant female with a chief complaint of abdominal pain who was seen in your ED one week ago for the same complaint. Her husband called the ambulance today after she had a “fainting spell.” On arrival in the ED, she is clammy and tachycardic. She is not obviously gravid. Vital signs reveal a supine systolic blood pressure of 70 mmHg and a heart rate of 130 beats per minute. Her abdomen is diffusely tender. The paramedics have been administering normal saline through two large-bore IVs running wide open. Your first thought is the obvious one to any experienced emergency physician—she has a ruptured ectopic pregnancy. Your second thought is, “Who was the idiot who discharged her last week?” As she's wheeled into the trauma room, you notice that her face looks familiar.