I am posting about the Corona virus on my main blog LINK
and have been too lazy to cross post here, since I'd have to remove the political stuff and that would take time.
however, if you are interested in infectious disease, check out the Teaching company videos that they posted on youtube: A course in infectious disease:
Monday, March 23, 2020
Saturday, March 21, 2020
Pre eclampsia: Pregnancy can be dangerous
A woman in our neighborhood just died in childbirth of eclampsia... they did a CSection but the baby died too. Sigh.
There was a delay sending her to the hospital in the next town due to the blockades and discouragement of going outside.
Sigh. This is the third death in the last ten years in our neighborhood: two in older ladies who had a history of high blood pressure (one also with twins) and one a teenager who was too ashamed to see a physician or midwife for prenatal care. In both cases, the babies were saved.
Article on the problem LINK
one of the problems here in the Philippines is the lack of prenatal care for the poor: Many deliver with midwives, and many more just don't go for prenatal care because they don't realize why then need to get care. But even with prenatal care, this problem can appear suddenly or be missed.
When a person develops signs of pre eclampsia (swelling, headache, etc) the treatment is bedrest, anti seizure and anti high blood pressure medicine, and deliver the baby as soon as possible.
Here, this means going to the referral hospital in the next town for most people, although Dr. Angi can do this in the local private hospital (but no ICU for the baby).
The next town is only 10 miles away, and the roads are paved, but still it may take 30 to 69 minutes for transfer, or more if you live in the rural areas. When one of our farmer's wives developed edema/tremors, it took 3 hours to arrange an ambulance and get it to her house, and another hour to transfer her to the hospital, and she too died on the operating table.
Dr. Angi said frustratedly: Why didn't you just put her in a car and send her to me? But of course, that assumes she wouldn't have gone into convulsions in the car, and the transfer would still have taken time.
Few American doctors have cared for a complicated case of eclampsia: We did see it in the IHS, but a prompt C section usually prevented the mom from going into the seizures that are often fatal.
Ironically, in Africa, the women did not develop the typical signs of edema/swollen legs and high blood pressure: I'm not sure why: Maybe due to the low salt diet in the area where I worked.
They would come in without problems and then suddenly start having brisk reflexes, then tremor, and then would have a seizure. Sometimes the seizures happened after the delivery (one third of cases).
The argument about a C section vs waiting a short time to let her deliver normally was a sub plot in Downton Abbey... Back then, in the days before antibiotics and blood transfusions, there was a high death rate from the surgery, and if it had been done, the mother might have died anyway.
There was a delay sending her to the hospital in the next town due to the blockades and discouragement of going outside.
Sigh. This is the third death in the last ten years in our neighborhood: two in older ladies who had a history of high blood pressure (one also with twins) and one a teenager who was too ashamed to see a physician or midwife for prenatal care. In both cases, the babies were saved.
Article on the problem LINK
one of the problems here in the Philippines is the lack of prenatal care for the poor: Many deliver with midwives, and many more just don't go for prenatal care because they don't realize why then need to get care. But even with prenatal care, this problem can appear suddenly or be missed.
When a person develops signs of pre eclampsia (swelling, headache, etc) the treatment is bedrest, anti seizure and anti high blood pressure medicine, and deliver the baby as soon as possible.
Here, this means going to the referral hospital in the next town for most people, although Dr. Angi can do this in the local private hospital (but no ICU for the baby).
The next town is only 10 miles away, and the roads are paved, but still it may take 30 to 69 minutes for transfer, or more if you live in the rural areas. When one of our farmer's wives developed edema/tremors, it took 3 hours to arrange an ambulance and get it to her house, and another hour to transfer her to the hospital, and she too died on the operating table.
Dr. Angi said frustratedly: Why didn't you just put her in a car and send her to me? But of course, that assumes she wouldn't have gone into convulsions in the car, and the transfer would still have taken time.
Few American doctors have cared for a complicated case of eclampsia: We did see it in the IHS, but a prompt C section usually prevented the mom from going into the seizures that are often fatal.
Ironically, in Africa, the women did not develop the typical signs of edema/swollen legs and high blood pressure: I'm not sure why: Maybe due to the low salt diet in the area where I worked.
They would come in without problems and then suddenly start having brisk reflexes, then tremor, and then would have a seizure. Sometimes the seizures happened after the delivery (one third of cases).
The argument about a C section vs waiting a short time to let her deliver normally was a sub plot in Downton Abbey... Back then, in the days before antibiotics and blood transfusions, there was a high death rate from the surgery, and if it had been done, the mother might have died anyway.
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