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OG16.1-3 | Third Stage Complications — Practice Quiz

Practice 10 questions · Untimed · Unlimited attempts

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Q1 OG16.1 1 pt

Postpartum haemorrhage (PPH) is defined as blood loss of how much following a vaginal delivery?

A ≥300 mL within 24 hours
B ≥500 mL within 24 hours
C ≥750 mL within 24 hours
D ≥1000 mL within 24 hours

Correct. PPH is defined as ≥500 mL blood loss after vaginal delivery, or ≥1000 mL after caesarean section, within 24 hours of delivery.

Standard definition of PPH: ≥500 mL (vaginal) or ≥1000 mL (caesarean section) within 24 hours of delivery, or any blood loss causing haemodynamic compromise.

PPH threshold differs by route of delivery: ≥500 mL (vaginal) or ≥1000 mL (caesarean). Any haemodynamically significant loss also qualifies regardless of volume.

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Q2 OG16.1 1 pt

The mnemonic '4 Ts' is used to classify causes of PPH. Which of the following correctly identifies all four T categories?

A Tone, Trauma, Tissue, Thrombin
B Tone, Tear, Tissue, Thrombosis
C Tension, Trauma, Tissue, Thrombin
D Tone, Trauma, Tumour, Thrombin

Correct. The 4 Ts are Tone (uterine atony — most common, 70–80%), Trauma (genital tract lacerations, uterine rupture), Tissue (retained placenta, membranes), and Thrombin (coagulopathy).

The 4 Ts mnemonic: Tone (uterine atony — 70-80%), Trauma, Tissue, Thrombin. Identifying the correct T directs appropriate management.

The 4 Ts framework: Tone (atony), Trauma (lacerations/rupture), Tissue (retained products), Thrombin (coagulopathy). Atony is responsible for ~80% of PPH cases.

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Q3 OG16.1 1 pt

Which uterotonic agent is CONTRAINDICATED in a patient with severe bronchial asthma who develops PPH due to uterine atony?

A Oxytocin 10 IU intramuscularly
B Misoprostol 800 mcg sublingually
C Carboprost (15-methyl PGF2α) 0.25 mg intramuscularly
D Tranexamic acid 1 g intravenously

Correct. Carboprost (15-methyl PGF2α) causes potent bronchoconstriction and is absolutely contraindicated in asthma. It can precipitate a life-threatening bronchospasm.

PPH uterotonic contraindications — KEY TRAP: Carboprost is contraindicated in asthma (bronchospasm); Ergometrine/methylergometrine is contraindicated in hypertension (vasoconstriction causing BP surge). Always screen before prescribing.

Carboprost (15-methyl PGF2α) is contraindicated in asthma due to bronchoconstriction. Oxytocin and misoprostol are safe. Tranexamic acid is an antifibrinolytic adjunct, not a uterotonic.

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Q4 OG16.1 1 pt

Active Management of the Third Stage of Labour (AMTSL) reduces the incidence of PPH by approximately what percentage?

A 15–20%
B 25–30%
C 40%
D 60–70%

Correct. AMTSL — specifically the administration of oxytocin 10 IU IM within 1 minute of baby delivery — reduces PPH incidence by approximately 40%.

AMTSL with oxytocin 10 IU IM within 1 minute of delivery is the single most important PPH prevention measure, reducing incidence by ~40%.

AMTSL with oxytocin 10 IU IM within 1 minute of delivery reduces PPH by ~40%. The three components of AMTSL are: (1) uterotonic within 1 min, (2) controlled cord traction, (3) uterine massage.

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Q5 OG16.1 1 pt

In PPH management, which uterotonic agent is CONTRAINDICATED in a patient with severe pregnancy-induced hypertension?

A Oxytocin
B Ergometrine (methylergometrine)
C Misoprostol
D Carboprost

Correct. Ergometrine causes intense peripheral vasoconstriction and is absolutely contraindicated in hypertension (PIH, preeclampsia) as it can trigger a hypertensive crisis, stroke, or myocardial infarction.

Ergometrine/methylergometrine: contraindicated in hypertension, heart disease, peripheral vascular disease. Carboprost: contraindicated in asthma. Know both traps for MCQs and clinical practice.

Ergometrine/methylergometrine causes vasoconstriction — contraindicated in hypertension. Carboprost is contraindicated in asthma. Oxytocin and misoprostol are safe in hypertension.

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Q6 OG16.2 1 pt

In bimanual uterine compression for atonic PPH, the correct hand position is:

A Both hands on the abdomen compressing the uterus externally
B One fist in the vagina elevating the uterus, other hand compressing the uterus abdominally
C One hand inside the uterine cavity, other hand on the abdomen
D Finger and thumb of one hand compressing the lower uterine segment via the vagina

Correct. Bimanual compression: one fist (or closed fingers) in the anterior vaginal fornix elevates the uterus, while the other hand on the abdomen compresses the uterine fundus from above, sandwiching the uterus between both hands.

Bimanual uterine compression: vaginal fist (or closed fingers) in anterior fornix + abdominal hand over fundus. Compresses the uterus between two hands. First and most immediately available PPH technique.

Bimanual compression uses both hands: vaginal fist elevates and supports from below, abdominal hand compresses the fundus from above. This mechanical compression occludes the spiral arteries at the placental bed.

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Q7 OG16.2 1 pt

An intrauterine balloon tamponade is described as the 'tamponade test'. A positive tamponade test (bleeding stops after balloon inflation) indicates:

A The patient needs immediate laparotomy
B Surgical haemostatic sutures will be required
C The haemorrhage is likely controlled and surgical intervention may be avoided
D The uterus needs to be removed

Correct. A positive tamponade test — bleeding ceases after balloon inflation — predicts that haemorrhage is controllable by hydrostatic pressure, often avoiding the need for surgical intervention.

Positive tamponade test = bleeding stops after intrauterine balloon inflation → likely avoids surgery. Negative test (bleeding continues) = proceed to surgical options (B-Lynch suture, haemostatic sutures, or hysterectomy).

A positive tamponade test means bleeding has stopped with the balloon in place, suggesting the haemorrhage is atony-driven and controllable without surgery. The balloon can be left 24 hours and slowly deflated.

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Q8 OG16.2 1 pt

The Non-Pneumatic Anti-Shock Garment (NASG) is best described as:

A A device that delivers oxygen directly to peripheral tissues
B A compression garment that increases central blood volume and core perfusion by applying external pressure to lower body segments
C A pneumatic device requiring a pump for inflation
D A device used to measure intra-abdominal pressure in shock

Correct. The NASG applies circumferential external compression to the lower limbs and abdomen, auto-transfusing approximately 500–1000 mL of blood to the central circulation, supporting BP and perfusion while definitive treatment is arranged.

NASG: non-pneumatic, circumferential lower-body compression. Provides ~500-1000 mL auto-transfusion effect. First-responder device, particularly useful in resource-limited settings or during transfer.

The NASG is a non-pneumatic (no pump needed) compression device that increases central blood volume by squeezing the lower body. It is particularly valuable in resource-limited settings as a bridge to definitive care.

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Q9 OG16.3 1 pt

Uterine inversion is classified by degree. Which statement correctly describes Grade 2 (second-degree) uterine inversion?

A The fundus is dimpled inward but remains within the uterine cavity
B The inverted fundus extends through the cervix and lies in the vagina but does not protrude beyond the introitus
C The inverted fundus protrudes beyond the vaginal introitus
D Both the uterus and vaginal walls are completely inverted outside the introitus

Correct. Grade 2 (second-degree) inversion: the inverted fundus passes through the cervix and lies in the vagina but does not protrude beyond the introitus. Grade 1 = within cavity; Grade 3 = beyond introitus; Grade 4 = vaginal walls inverted too.

Four grades of uterine inversion: 1st (fundal dimple in cavity), 2nd (fundus in vagina, not beyond introitus), 3rd (fundus beyond introitus), 4th (uterus + vaginal walls inverted). Grade determines urgency and route of reduction.

Inversion grades: Grade 1 = fundal dimple within cavity; Grade 2 = fundus in vagina (not beyond introitus); Grade 3 = beyond introitus; Grade 4 = uterus + vaginal walls prolapsed outside.

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Q10 OG16.3 1 pt

In the management of acute uterine inversion, the placenta is still attached. What is the correct sequence of management?

A Remove the placenta first, then attempt manual reduction
B Attempt manual reduction with placenta in situ, then remove placenta after reduction
C Perform immediate hysterectomy without attempting reduction
D Administer oxytocin first to contract the uterus, then attempt reduction

Correct. NEVER remove the placenta before reduction — this causes massive haemorrhage from the exposed placental bed. Reduce the inversion first with placenta in situ, THEN remove the placenta after the fundus is repositioned. Also give tocolytics, NOT oxytocin, before reduction.

Uterine inversion with attached placenta: REDUCE FIRST, remove placenta after. The placenta tamponades the raw placental bed. Premature removal causes catastrophic haemorrhage. Tocolysis relaxes the cervical ring to facilitate reduction.

Critical rule: never remove the attached placenta before reducing a uterine inversion. The placenta acts as a tamponade over the open spiral arteries. Remove only after full reduction. Tocolysis (not uterotonic) is given to relax the cervical ring.

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