This second part covers changes in the intestines, appendix, and liver during pregnancy. These adaptations range from beneficial (enhanced nutrient absorption) to uncomfortable (constipation and hemorrhoids) to potentially dangerous (altered diagnosis of appendicitis). Understanding these physiological changes is crucial for providing appropriate care to pregnant patients.
🩸 Small Intestine
13. Decreased Small Bowel Motility
What happens:
Food moves more slowly through the small intestine
Why it happens:
- Progesterone relaxes intestinal smooth muscle
- Reduced motilin levels
- Decreased migrating motor complex activity (the "housekeeping" contractions)
14. Enhanced Nutrient Absorption
What happens:
Body absorbs more nutrients from food
Why it happens:
- Slower transit time allows more contact time with absorptive surface
- Increased intestinal blood flow
- Hormonal upregulation of nutrient transporters
- Increased absorptive surface area
15. Increased Water and Sodium Absorption
What happens:
Intestines pull more water from intestinal contents back into body
Why it happens:
- Aldosterone and progesterone increase sodium and water reabsorption
- Necessary to maintain expanded blood volume in pregnancy
- Changes in aquaporin channels (water transporters)
💩 Large Intestine (Colon)
16. Constipation (11-40% of pregnancies)
What happens:
Hard stools, infrequent bowel movements, straining, feeling of incomplete evacuation
Why it happens:
- Decreased colonic motility: Progesterone relaxes colonic smooth muscle, slowing transit
- Increased water absorption: Makes stool harder and drier
- Iron supplementation: Commonly prescribed in pregnancy, iron is constipating
- Mechanical compression: Enlarged uterus compresses rectosigmoid colon in third trimester
- Decreased physical activity: Common in pregnancy
- Dietary changes: Some women eat less fiber
17. Hemorrhoids (25-35% of pregnancies)
What happens:
Swollen, inflamed veins in rectum and anus; can be internal or external
Why it happens:
- Constipation and straining: Increases pressure on rectal veins
- Increased blood volume: 40-50% more blood creates more pressure in veins
- Progesterone: Relaxes vein walls, making them more prone to swelling
- Mechanical compression: Enlarged uterus compresses inferior vena cava and pelvic veins, causing blood to pool in rectal veins
- Increased intra-abdominal pressure: From growing uterus
18. Anal Fissures
What happens:
Small tears in anal lining causing pain and bleeding during bowel movements
Why it happens:
- Passage of hard, large stools from constipation
- Increased pressure during defecation
- Hormonal effects on tissue elasticity
📍 Appendix
19. Displaced Appendix
What happens:
Appendix moves upward and outward from its normal position
Why it happens:
- Mechanical displacement by enlarging uterus
- By third trimester, may be at level of umbilicus or higher
- Rotated laterally and posteriorly
Clinical significance:
- Makes diagnosis of appendicitis difficult
- Classic right lower quadrant pain may present as right upper quadrant or flank pain
- Appendicitis is the most common non-obstetric surgical emergency in pregnancy (1 in 1,500 pregnancies)
- Peritoneal signs may be muted due to stretched abdominal wall
- Imaging (ultrasound, MRI) becomes more important for diagnosis
🧬 Liver
20. Spider Angiomas (Spider Nevi) (60-70%)
What happens:
Small, red, spider-like blood vessels on skin, especially on face, neck, upper chest, arms
Why it happens:
- Hyperestrogenemia (high estrogen levels)
- Estrogen causes proliferation of cutaneous blood vessels
- Increased blood flow to skin
21. Palmar Erythema (60-70%)
What happens:
Redness of palms, especially the thenar and hypothenar eminences
Why it happens:
- High estrogen levels increase blood flow to skin
- Vasodilation in palmar vessels
- Same mechanism as spider angiomas
22. Increased Alkaline Phosphatase (ALP) (2-4 times normal)
What happens:
Blood test shows elevated ALP levels
Why it happens:
- Placenta produces large amounts of ALP (placental isoenzyme)
- Begins rising in second trimester
- Peaks in third trimester
- NOT from liver - it's placental origin
25. Normal Transaminases (ALT, AST)
What happens:
Liver enzymes remain within normal range
Why it happens:
- Healthy liver function continues normally
- No hepatocellular injury in normal pregnancy
23. Decreased Serum Albumin (20-30% reduction)
What happens:
Lower albumin levels in blood
Why it happens:
- Hemodilution - plasma volume increases 40-50% but albumin production doesn't match
- Increased renal albumin loss (slight)
- Increased catabolism
24. Slightly Decreased or Normal Bilirubin
What happens:
Bilirubin levels stay normal or decrease slightly
Why it happens:
- Hemodilution effect
- Increased hepatic clearance
- Enhanced bile flow in normal pregnancy
26. Increased Hepatic Blood Flow
What happens:
More blood flows through the liver
Why it happens:
- Increased cardiac output (30-50% increase)
- Expanded blood volume
- Hormonal vasodilation
27. Altered Drug Metabolism
What happens:
Changes in how liver processes medications
Why it happens:
- Increased activity of some cytochrome P450 enzymes
- Decreased activity of others
- Changes in plasma protein binding (less albumin to bind drugs)
- Increased liver blood flow
🧠 Key Points Summary - Part 2
- Small intestine: Slower motility enhances nutrient absorption but causes bloating
- Large intestine: Constipation affects 11-40%, hemorrhoids 25-35% of pregnancies
- Appendix displacement: Makes diagnosing appendicitis challenging in pregnancy
- Liver changes: Spider angiomas and palmar erythema are benign estrogen effects
- Lab values: ALP elevation is normal (placental origin), but ALT/AST should remain normal
- Albumin decreases due to hemodilution, not liver dysfunction
- Bilirubin should not rise in normal pregnancy
- Drug metabolism changes require medication dosage adjustments
- ALT/AST normal = Good liver in pregnancy
- ALP high = Placenta not liver disease
- Albumin low = Hemodilution not malnutrition
- Appendix moves up with growing uterus
- Constipation → Hemorrhoids → Fissures (cascading effects)
- Spider nevi + Palmar erythema = Estrogen effects, not cirrhosis