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Apex Nursing

Case Study — Maternal-Newborn

Postpartum Hemorrhage NGN Case Study

A Next Gen NCLEX-style unfolding case. Read each step, commit to your own answer — out loud or on paper — and only then reveal ours. The six steps mirror the NCSBN Clinical Judgment Measurement Model exactly as the exam tests it.

15 min activity · Maternal-Newborn

Educational use only. This case is a learning exercise with simplified values, not a treatment protocol — real PPH care follows provider orders, your facility’s OB hemorrhage protocol, and uterotonic contraindication screening. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

The Scenario

1620, postpartum unit: Ms. Trent, 29, G2P2, delivered a healthy 9 lb 2 oz boy vaginally at 1510 after a labor augmented with oxytocin; the third stage was unremarkable. History includes chronic hypertension, well controlled. She’s breastfeeding and feeling “wiped out but okay.” During your one-hour check you find her pad saturated — the second since delivery — with a slow, steady trickle visible.

1622 Assessment

  • Fundus: boggy, above the umbilicus, deviated to the right
  • Lochia: heavy rubra with small clots; steady trickle between pad changes
  • HR 96 · BP 118/74 · RR 18 · SpO₂ 98% — she calls it “normal for me”
  • Skin slightly pale; she reports feeling “a little lightheaded when I sat up to feed”
  • Bladder: hasn’t voided since delivery; IV (oxytocin completed) saline-locked

Step 1 — Recognize Cues

Which findings are most relevant — and which matter most right now? List the cues you would flag before revealing.

Reveal answer

The bleeding cues: a boggy fundus (the uterus is not clamping its vessels), saturated pads with a steady trickle, and lightheadedness. The fundus high and deviated right is its own clue: a full bladder is pushing the uterus aside and preventing contraction — and she hasn’t voided since delivery.

The risk-factor stack she walked in with: macrosomic baby (overdistended uterus), oxytocin augmentation (a tired uterus), multiparity, and a fast accumulation of “normal-ish” blood loss.

The trap: her vitals. Healthy young postpartum patients compensate beautifully — until they don’t. HR 96 and a normal BP can coexist with a liter already lost; the steady trickle is the cue, not the monitor. Quantified blood loss (weigh the pads) beats eyeballing every time.

Step 2 — Analyze Cues

Run the Four T’s. Which cause does the evidence support, and how do you check the others?

Reveal answer

Tone (most supported — and most common, ~70–80% of PPH): the boggy fundus IS uterine atony, with three reasons to be atonic (big baby, oxytocin-tired muscle, full bladder splinting it). The bladder deviation makes tone the working diagnosis with a built-in first fix.

Trauma: a steady bright trickle with a firm fundus points to a cervical or vaginal laceration — her fundus is boggy, so tone leads, but if bleeding persists after the uterus firms, trauma is next on the list and the provider examines.

Tissue: retained placental fragments keep the uterus from contracting — the placenta was inspected at delivery, but recurrent boggy episodes despite massage reopen this question.

Thrombin: coagulopathy — no history here, but oozing from IV sites or gums would flag it, and labs (CBC, coags, fibrinogen) travel with any significant PPH.

Step 3 — Prioritize Hypotheses

What’s the priority sequence — and which intervention doesn’t wait for anyone?

Reveal answer

1. Make the uterus contract — atony is the leading hypothesis and the leading killer in PPH, and its first treatment is in your hands, literally: fundal massage starts now, before the phone call, before anything.

2. Empty the bladder — the splinting bladder is actively defeating the uterus; this is the highest-yield “second hand” intervention.

3. Quantify and escalate — weigh pads (1 g ≈ 1 mL), call the provider, and anticipate the hemorrhage protocol. With her risk profile, this conversation happens early, not after the vitals finally fall.

NGN logic: when the most likely cause has an immediate bedside treatment, the action and the notification happen in parallel — massage with one hand, delegate the call with the other.

Step 4 — Generate Solutions

Draft the full response. Bedside actions, anticipated orders — and one medication screen that matters specifically for her.

Reveal answer

Bedside now: fundal massage (support the lower segment with one hand — massaging an unsupported uterus risks inversion), assist her to void or straight-cath if she can’t, keep the baby skin-to-skin/nursing if stable (breastfeeding releases endogenous oxytocin — free uterotonic), vitals cycling frequently, pad weights running.

Anticipated orders: restart IV oxytocin (first-line uterotonic), IV fluids through a good line (anticipate a second), CBC/type-and-screen activated, and second-line uterotonics if atony persists.

The screen that matters for HER: methylergonovine (Methergine) is contraindicated in hypertension — and she has chronic hypertension. If it’s ordered, you question it; expect carboprost (Hemabate — contraindicated in asthma, which you also verify) or misoprostol instead. Knowing the uterotonic contraindication pairs is the exam point and the bedside save.

Step 5 — Take Action

1640: after massage, a straight cath (700 mL), and oxytocin restarted, the fundus firms at the umbilicus and the trickle slows — then at 1655 it goes boggy again and the trickle resumes. Pad weights total roughly 900 mL since delivery. HR is now 112; BP 102/64; she’s anxious. What does this re-bog mean, and what do you do?

Reveal answer

It means first-line is failing — recurrent atony despite massage, an empty bladder, and oxytocin is the trigger for the next tier: activate the OB hemorrhage protocol and get the provider to the bedside (not on the phone). Anticipate second-line uterotonics (carboprost or misoprostol — not Methergine for her), tranexamic acid per protocol, labs including fibrinogen, and possible interventions from balloon tamponade to the OR if bleeding continues.

Her vitals have started telling the truth: HR climbing, BP drifting down, anxiety — compensation is running out at ~900 mL and counting. Second IV, fluids running, oxygen per protocol, warmth, and someone watching her continuously while you work.

Don’t lose the family: a calm sentence to her partner — “her uterus is being lazy about clamping down; we treat this often and the whole team is here” — buys cooperation and lowers the panic in the room, including hers (catecholamines don’t help bleeding patients).

Step 6 — Evaluate Outcomes

2100: after carboprost and TXA, the fundus has stayed firm for three hours; total QBL ~1,300 mL; hemoglobin 8.9 from 12.1; she’s on continued oxytocin, vitals stable, nursing the baby. What shows success, what continues, and what does she need to know before discharge?

Reveal answer

Improving: a fundus that stays firm without your hand on it, lochia downgraded to moderate, stable vitals — the atony broke before she needed blood products or the OR.

Continuing: scheduled fundal and lochia checks (atony recurs — the next 24 hours are not optional), serial hemoglobin, iron repletion planning, orthostatic precautions (she WILL be lightheaded — first ambulation is assisted, always), and extra support for breastfeeding and rest, because anemia makes both harder.

Her discharge teaching: normal lochia progression (rubra → serosa → alba) and the red flags — returning bright-red bleeding, clots larger than an egg, soaking a pad in an hour, foul odor, fever, or worsening dizziness — plus the honest heads-up that fatigue from anemia is real and recovery deserves help at home. And in her chart, permanently: history of PPH — the single biggest risk factor for the next one, so the next team starts prepared.

Debrief — The Pattern to Keep

  • Boggy fundus = massage NOW, with the lower segment supported — the first treatment for the most common cause is your hand.
  • Fundus high and deviated = full bladder splinting the uterus; emptying it is the highest-yield second move.
  • Young postpartum patients compensate until they crash — trust the quantified blood loss (weigh pads), not the early vitals.
  • Uterotonic contraindication pairs: Methergine ↔ hypertension; Hemabate ↔ asthma — screen before, not after.
  • Firm fundus + steady bright trickle = think laceration; recurrent atony despite first-line = activate the hemorrhage protocol, provider to bedside.

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