Obstetrics

Eclampsia

The Seizure Emergency in Pregnancy

Obstetric Emergencies

Eclampsia is the occurrence of generalized tonic-clonic seizures and/or coma in a woman with preeclampsia, not attributable to any other neurological cause. It is a medical emergency with high maternal and fetal mortality.

Epidemiology & Risk Factors

1 in 2000 (developed) to 1 in 100 (low-resource). Most in third trimester or postpartum.

  • Primigravida
  • Teenage/elderly mothers
  • Multiple pregnancy
  • Chronic HTN, renal disease
  • Poor ANC

Pathophysiology

Placental ischemia → endothelial dysfunction → cerebral vasospasm → edema → seizures.

Clinical Features

Prodromal Signs

  • Severe headache
  • Visual disturbances
  • Epigastric pain
  • Restlessness

Seizure Stages

  1. Premonitory: facial twitching
  2. Tonic: rigidity (~15–20s)
  3. Clonic: jerking (~60s)
  4. Coma: variable duration

Timing

  • Antepartum: 50%
  • Intrapartum: 30%
  • Postpartum: 20%

Management: Control, Stabilize, Deliver

MgSO₄ (Pritchard Regimen)

  • Loading: 4g IV + 10g IM
  • Maintenance: 5g IM q4h × 24h
  • Monitor: reflexes, RR ≥16, UO ≥25 mL/h
  • Antidote: Calcium gluconate 10 mL IV
Drug Dose Comments
Labetalol 20–80 mg IV q10min First-line
Hydralazine 5–10 mg IV q20min Emergency
Nifedipine 10 mg PO Avoid with MgSO₄
Definitive: Delivery after stabilization

Prevention

  • Early ANC
  • Aspirin 75–150 mg from 12w (high-risk)
  • Calcium 1–2 g/day

Key Takeaways

  • Eclampsia = seizures in preeclampsia
  • Prodromal: headache, vision, pain
  • MgSO₄ Pritchard regimen
  • Monitor reflexes, UO, RR
  • Delivery = cure
  • Postpartum risk up to 2 weeks

Conclusion

Eclampsia is preventable with early detection of preeclampsia. MgSO₄ and timely delivery save lives.

Eclampsia is a race against time — act before the seizure.