Clinical Concepts in Pelvic Ultrasound
/Your patient is a well appearing, otherwise healthy 22 year old female who presents with lower abdominal pain x3 days. She is unsure of her LMP, but thinks she had some spotting about a month ago. Vital signs: Temp 99.3F, HR 92, BP 102/70, RR 20, 98% on RA. She has a benign, non-gravid abdomen. Urine pregnancy is positive. You fire off a quantitative hCG and don’t expect that result to come back for a while. What do you do next?
ACEP recommends (Level C recommendation) obtaining a diagnostic pelvic ultrasound regardless of the beta hCG level in a symptomatic pregnant patient, even though you may not definitively see an IUP. Other secondary findings on ultrasound, such as increased amounts of free fluid, can suggest the diagnosis of ectopic pregnancy. Pelvic ultrasounds can be acquired both trans-vaginally (TV) and trans-abdominally (TA). The threshold for detecting an IUP is 5-6 weeks by TV ultrasound and 6-7 weeks by TA ultrasound.
To diagnose an IUP, you must see a gestational sac with a yolk sac, +/- a fetal pole. The endometrial stripe must be continuous from the cervix to the gestational sac, and when you interrogate in the longitudinal and transverse planes, you must be able to appreciate myometrium surrounding the entire gestational sac at a minimum thickness of 5-8mm. To the right, you see a representative negative image (top left), an empty gestational sac (top right), and two positive IUPs (bottom).
The following are some examples of pelvic ultrasound findings. Watch the video and then click to read the discussion.
+ What is the Differential Diagnosis for this Finding?
+ How do you quantify free fluid on pelvic ultrasound?
+ Where is this pregnancy located?
References
- Cadogan, Mike. Emergency Ultrasound. http://lifeinthefastlane.com/emergency-ultrasound/ Accessed 4/27/2016.
- Hahn SA, Lavonas EJ, Mace SE, Napoli AM, Fesmire FM. Critical issues in the initial evaluation and management of patients presenting to the emergency department in early pregnancy. Ann Emerg Med 2012;60:381-90. 55.
- Hwang JQ, Kimberly HH, Liteplo AS, Sajed D (2011). An Evidence-Based Approach to Emergency Ultrasound. Emergency Medicine Practice, 13(3)
- Lozeau AM, Potter B. Diagnosis and management of ectopic pregnancy. Am Fam Physician. 2005 Nov 1;72((9)):1707–14.
- Stovall TG, Kellerman AL, Ling FW, Buster JE. Emergency department diagnosis of ectopic pregnancy. Ann Emerg Med.1990;19(10):1098-1103.