The loss of >500 ml of blood per-vagina within 24 hours of delivery
Aetiology
The causes for primary post-partum haemorrhage can be broadly categorised by the 4 T’s - tone, tissue, trauma and thrombin:
Tone
- Refers to uterine atony - the most common cause of primary PPH
- This is where the uterus fails to contract adequately following delivery, due to a lack of tone in the uterine muscle
Tissue
- Refers to the retention of placental tissue which prevents the uterus from contracting
- It is the 2nd most common cause of primary PPH
Trauma
- Refers to damage sustained to the reproductive tract during delivery (e.g. vaginal tears, cervical tears)
Thrombin
- Refers to coagulopathies and vascular abnormalities which increase the risk of primary PPH
- Vascular - placental abruption, hypertension, pre-eclampsia.
- Coagulopathies - von Willebrand’s disease, haemophilia A/B, ITP or acquired coagulopathy i.e. DIC, HELLP
Clinical presentation
Symptoms
- Bleeding from the vagina
- If there is substantial blood loss, the patient may complain of dizziness, palpitations, and shortness of breath
Signs
- General examination may reveal haemodynamic instability with tachypnoea, prolonged capillary refill time, tachycardia, and hypotension
- Abdominal examination may show signs of uterine rupture i.e. palpation of fetal parts as it moves into the abdomen from the uterus
- Speculum examination may reveal sites of local trauma causing bleeding
- Examine the placenta to ensure that the placenta is complete
Clinical Classification of PPH-Related Shock
Shock Stage | Approx. Blood Loss | Clinical Features | WHO / ACOG Interpretation |
Compensated Shock | 500–1000 mL | Tachycardia, palpitations, dizziness, normal BP | Early hypovolemia – do not wait |
Mild Shock | 1000–1500 mL | Tachycardia, weakness, diaphoresis, SBP 80–100 mmHg | PPH diagnosis established |
Moderate Shock | 1500–2000 mL | Pallor, anxiety, oliguria, hypotension | Hemorrhagic shock |
Severe Shock | ≥2000 mL | Collapse, air hunger, anuria, SBP <70 mmHg | Life-threatening / Class III–IV shock |
Important WHO / ACOG Notes
- Shock Index (HR/SBP) ≥ 1.0 → severe hemorrhage
- Normal BP does not exclude shock
- Visual blood loss underestimates severity
Investigations
- Bloods - FBC, cross match 4-6 units of blood, coag. screen, U+Es, LFTs
Management
- Resuscitation with ABCDE approach
- Definitive management depends on cause
Uterine atony
- Bimanual compression to stimulate uterine contraction
- Empty bladder - Foley catheter
- Pharmacological measures which increase uterine myometrial contraction e.g. oxytocin (syntocinon), ergometrine, carboprost, misoprostol
- If unsuccessful consider surgical measures - intrauterine balloon tamponade, haemostatic suture around uterus (e.g. B-lynch), bilateral uterine or internal iliac artery ligation, hysterectomy (last resort)
Trauma
- Primary repair of laceration, if uterine rupture: laparotomy and repair or hysterectomy
Tissue
- Administer IV oxytocin, manual removal of placenta with regional or general anaesthetic, and prophylactic antibiotics in theatre
- Start IV oxytocin infusion after removal
Thrombin
- Correct any coagulation abnormalities with blood products under the advice of the haematology team
Prevention
- Identify and if possible treat antenatal and intrapartum risk factors
- Active management of third stage of labour - syntocinon/syntometrine IM/IV
Drugs Dosing
First-Line Uterotonic
Drug | Dose | Route | Frequency / Max | Key Notes |
Oxytocin | 10 IU | IM | Single dose | Preferred prophylaxis & treatment |
ㅤ | 10–40 IU in 1 L | IV infusion | 60–200 mU/min | Avoid IV bolus (hypotension) |
Second-Line Uterotonics
Drug | Dose | Route | Frequency / Max | Contraindications |
Ergometrine | 0.2 mg | IM / slow IV | q2–4 h, max 1 mg | HTN, pre-eclampsia, cardiac disease |
Methylergometrine | 0.2 mg | IM | q2–4 h | Same as ergometrine |
Carboprost (15-methyl PGF₂α) | 250 µg | IM | q15–90 min, max 2 mg (8 doses) | Asthma, pulmonary disease |
Misoprostol | 800–1000 µg | PR / SL | Single dose | Fever, shivering common |
Antifibrinolytic
Drug | Dose | Route | Timing | Notes |
Tranexamic Acid (TXA) | 1 g | IV over 10 min | Within 3 hours of birth | Repeat 1 g if bleeding continues after 30 min or recurs within 24 h |
Adjunctive Drugs
Drug | Indication | Dose |
Calcium gluconate | Hypocalcemia during massive transfusion | 10 mL of 10% IV |
Broad-spectrum antibiotics | Suspected infection / prolonged labour | As per protocol |
Fibrinogen concentrate | Fibrinogen <200 mg/dL | 2–4 g IV |
Massive Transfusion Reference (Drug-Related)
Component | Trigger |
PRBC | Hb <7 g/dL or ongoing shock |
FFP | INR >1.5 |
Platelets | <50,000/µL |
Cryoprecipitate | Fibrinogen <200 mg/dL |