Abstract

Background: Hepatic rupture is a complication during pregnancy that, although rare, accounts for high morbidity and mortality rates. It is mainly associated with severe preeclampsia and HELLP syndrome. Incidence is estimated to be at one per 67,000 births or one per 2000 patients with preeclampsia/eclampsia/HELLP, mainly in multiparous women; women in their 40s; after 32 weeks of gestation; and during the first 15 h postpartum.Cases: This article exposes the institutional experience at Fundación Valle del Lili in Cali, Colombia, in managing and treating hepatic rupture associated with severe preeclampsia and HELLP syndrome in three patients in the 30th, the 26th, and the 27th week of gestation, not resulting in maternal death.Discussion: A search in Pubmed, Embase, and Ovid from 2000 to 2017 resulted in 35 cases reported in either pregnant or puerperal women. Hepatic rupture is a rare complication in pregnancy associated with preeclampsia and HELLP syndrome. Its pathophysiology is attributed to the presence of vasospasm due to an increase in concentration and sensitivity to circulating vasopressors during pregnancy. There is no standard management, but surgery reduces mortality significantly. It includes endovascular management, partial hepatectomy, or transplant (only one patient required a liver transplant in our search). The most used techniques have been ligation of the hepatic artery, embolization of the hepatic artery, and examination, packing, and drainage of hepatic lesion for bleeding control (27 cases were treated with laparotomy with evacuation of hematoma and hemostasis and four cases were treated with embolization of the hepatic artery). Hepatic artery occlusion both by surgery ligation and by embolization through interventional radiology has reported successful and failing results during pregnancyConclusion: Management of pathologies as hepatic rupture associated with severe preeclampsia and HELLP syndrome has to be clearly protocolized for prompt diagnosis and early management. Furthermore, it has to be carried out through multidisciplinary teams in high-complexity obstetrics scenarios.

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