Abstract:
INTRODUCTION: With improvement in obstetric care, the burden due to direct causes of maternal mortality has declined bringing medical conditions to the forefront. Heart disease in pregnancy remains a major cause of maternal morbidity and mortality in Sri Lanka. In the absence of a robust pre-conception care programme, many women with pre-existing heart disease embark on pregnancy unaware of the underlying abnormalities. This study was aimed at describing the proportion of women with heart disease, the type of heart disease and the time of detection in this population. METHODS: The North Colombo Obstetric database (NORCOD) records data for all women who deliver at the university obstetric unit of the North Colombo Teaching hospital, Ragama, Sri Lanka. Details of women delivered between March and August 2014 were used in a retrospective analysis. Data on booking screening, and pregnancy care with regard to heart disease were analysed. RESULTS: A total of 1830 pregnancies were included. Fifty (2.7%) were complicated with heart disease. 15 (0.8%) patients were known to have pre-existing heart disease at the time of booking. They included 10 with congenital heart disease (treated ASD in 3, untreated ASD in 1, untreated VSD in 1, ligated PDA in 1 and mitral valve disease in 4) and 5 acquired heart disease due to rheumatic heart disease. A cardiac murmur on auscultation was detected in 61 women (3.3%) at their booking screening. 26 (42.6%) of them were found to have an underlying cardiac lesion. The commonest lesion was isolated mitral valve prolapse (n = 11), followed by mitral regurgitation associated with mitral valve prolapse (MVP) in 10, tricuspid regurgitation (TR) in 3, and one each of ASD and VSD. Nine others were found to have underlying cardiac lesion at assessment during pregnancy, in the absence of any abnormality at booking. These included 6 with MVP, 2 with mitral regurgitation (MR) with MVP, and one with MR. CONCLUSION A significant proportion of women with cardiac abnormalities (70%) were detected during pregnancy. This highlights the importance of pre-conception care with screening in this population. While booking screen was able to identify a majority of patients, some were detected only during subsequent assessment. Clinical vigilance throughout pregnancy facilitates such detection.
Description:
E Poster Abstracts (EP13.36) of the RCOG World Congress April 12–15, 2015 Brisbane, Queensland, Australia