Main content
NCLEX-RN
Course: NCLEX-RN > Unit 19
Lesson 2: Pregnancy and pregnancy complications- Physiology of pregnancy
- Diagnosis of pregnancy
- Pregnancy physiology I
- Labor and delivery
- Postpartum physiology
- Preeclampsia
- Placenta previa
- Placental abruption
- Placenta accreta
- UTIs in pregnancy
- Blood conditions in pregnancy
- Sheehan syndrome
- Postpartum hemorrhage
- Uterine inversion
- Diabetes in pregnancy
- Preterm labor
- C-section
© 2023 Khan AcademyTerms of usePrivacy PolicyCookie Notice
Pregnancy physiology I
Visit us (http://www.khanacademy.org/science/healthcare-and-medicine) for health and medicine content or (http://www.khanacademy.org/test-prep/mcat) for MCAT related content. These videos do not provide medical advice and are for informational purposes only. The videos are not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Always seek the advice of a qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read or seen in any Khan Academy video. Created by Nauroz Syed.
Want to join the conversation?
- What if she lies on her right side?(13 votes)
- The inferior vena cava is on the right side so it is better to lie on the left side to reduce compression by the uterus on the inferior vena cava when lying down(13 votes)
- If Co2 is acidic, and is breathed out MORE in pregnancy, that would cause a reduction to body CO2 and therefore more of an alkaline environment. So why does the kidney produce MORE bicarb, which would the increase the body's alkalinity further? Shouldn't the kidney DECREASE bicarb production, in order to LOWER the ph?(11 votes)
- Increased minute ventilation and thus expelling more CO2 (i.e. acid) from the body leads to respiratory alkalosis and the kidney tries to compensate and help maintain blood pH homeostasis by regulating what gets secreted into filtrate (future urine) and what gets reabsorbed back into the bloodstream. When the kidney secretes bicarbonate, it is excreting it from the body via the urine (i.e., removing bicarb from the blood, not absorbing it into the blood). Spilling out bicarb via urination would help increase the acidity of the blood (lower blood pH)(9 votes)
- does gestational diabetes contribute to frequent urination ?(2 votes)
- Yep! Pregnant women need to pee more because the baby often puts pressure on the bladder, and of course diabetes also causes increased urination, so gestational diabetes patients have it doubly hard!(6 votes)
- What is the physiologic explanation for the unusual, insistent food cravings that some women experience during pregnancy?(2 votes)
- During pregnancy a woman is overall hungrier than she would be if she wasn't pregnant because of the baby growing. The food cravings has to do with the brain telling the woman "Eat this kind of food". Likewise the aversions has to do with the brain telling the woman "Don't eat this kind of food".(2 votes)
- As pregnant women are more likely to get kidney infections, what postures or exercises are recommended to drain out the stagnant urine into the bladder ?(2 votes)
- heart beat rate is inversely proportional to blood pressure , is this law not applicable to all normal situations ? most of the time when our heart beat rate has increased we find that bp has decreased . this is stated under marey's law.(1 vote)
- The mean arterial pressure (MAP), or blood pressure, is the average pressure over a cardiac cycle and is determined by the cardiac output (CO), systemic vascular resistance (SVR), and central venous pressure (CVP-this is often ignored).
BP=MAP= (CO*SVR)+CVP or BP=MAP= (CO*SVR)
Cardiac output is classically defined alongside stroke volume (SV) and the heart rate (HR)
CO= SV*HR
now if we combine these we get
BP= (stoke-volume*HR)*systemic-vascular-resistance
Thus we see that HR is DIRECTLY proportional not inversely proportional
Marey's Law was devised in 1861 by French physiologist Étienne-Jules Marey and was tested and refuted by many, the first was Francis Arthur Bainbridge some time between 1896 and 1921 if i remember correctly. The point is that BP cannot be inversely proportional to the rate at which the pump, which creates the pressure, pumps. That would make no sense...... unless the pump was creating energy, which violates many common laws.(2 votes)
- At around, shouldn't the decreased CO2 conc. in the blood decrease the production of Bicarb ions? 7:00
The compensation of respiratory alkalosis is reduction in the formation of HCO3- ions.
https://www.anaesthesiamcq.com/AcidBaseBook/ab6_5.php
Shouldn't the same apply here?(1 vote)- More CO2 is exhaled, so the equlibrium of the bicarbonate buffer would shift to produce more (HCO₃⁻ + H⁺ → H₂CO₃ → CO₂ + H₂O). This is great if you've got too many protons floating about - it'll get rid of the excess acid. If the problem is breathing off too much CO2, then there's a problem because you're using up all of your protons and making the blood pH too alkaline. To fix this, the kidneys throw out more bicarb in the urine, which means that CO2 is low and bicarb is low but the blood pH stays at a safe level.(2 votes)
- what happens to the extra blood after labor?
edit: just occurred to me that it's probably in the fetus, would that be correct?(1 vote)- Maternal and foetal blood are separated by the placenta. All of the foetal blood goes with the baby, as the placenta is also delivered.
On the maternal side, the extra blood volume stays in the woman's circulation. Sometimes this is very helpful - if there's significant blood loss, for example, that extra blood volume can work like a transfusion following delivery.(1 vote)
- Okay, what would happen if one of the kidneys gave out?(1 vote)
- what happens if she was bleeding out(1 vote)
Video transcript
- You know, there's that saying that it takes a village to raise a kid. Well, I guess you could say
that it takes an entire body, and I mean every single organ of a body, to make a baby. It's like the best example
of teamwork that there is, all the organs in the
body working together to support the growth and
the development of the fetus, but also just as important, to make sure that mom's body isn't
sacrificing its own needs to support the pregnancy. So in order to accomplish that, pretty much every organ system undergoes a significant amount of change. And I wanna go through
what those changes are. So let's start with the
cardiovascular system, so the heart and the blood
vessels throughout the body. And, I guess you could
say, at the very basic, most essential, level,
the body needs more blood to carry oxygen and those
nutrients to the fetus. So the blood volume increases by something like 40 to 50 percent
throughout the pregnancy. And it's not just that there's more blood. The heart is also working harder to more efficiently supply
that blood to the fetus. So, for example, the
heart beats more quickly. It beats, like, 10 to 15 beats more each minute than usual. And the stroke volume,
so the amount of blood that's pumped out with
each heartbeat, increases, which means that the cardiac output, or the amount of blood that's pumped out of the heart each
minute, also increases. So in summary, more blood is
being pumped out of the heart to meet the demands of the fetus. So if you had to take a guess, what do you think happens to blood pressure during pregnancy? I'm gonna guess that you guys
guessed that it increases, because that's certainly
what I thought happened. But it actually decreases. And it decreases for a
couple of different reasons. Firstly, there's a lot of progesterone floating around in the
blood during pregnancy. And, if there's something
that progesterone does really well, it
relaxes smooth muscle. And that includes the smooth muscle that surrounds all of the blood vessels. So that relaxation causes dilation of the blood vessels, which then lowers the blood pressure. So that's a first cause, sort of, of the decrease in blood
pressure through pregnancy. The second thing that contributes to the lower blood
pressure is the placenta, which is an addition of
an entirely brand-new blood vessel circuit to
the circulatory system. It's like when you add
a resistor in parallel, reducing the resistance
of the entire circuit. I'm just joking. That doesn't help anyone understand it any better. I guess you can think of it kind of, kind of as a tall apartment building and what would happen to the
pressure in the shower heads if you added a whole
additional floor of apartments, with shower heads that are really leaky and let out a lot of water. The placenta is kind of like that. It's a really low-resistance circuit. And also, while we're talking about the cardiovascular
system, there's a syndrome that's called Supine,
it's called Supine .. "Supine" means when
you're lying on your back, Supine Postural, so it's Supine Postural, "Postural" meaning related to posture, Supine Postural Hypotensive Syndrome, so Supine Postural
Hypotensive Syndrome. And it's weird that I'm
talk about a syndrome in a video that's talking about
physiology during pregnancy. But I guess you could
say, it's a syndrome, or something that goes wrong, due to normal pregnancy physiology. So anyways, what it refers to is when, late in the course of a pregnancy, the uterus becomes larger, right? And when the uterus becomes larger, it can compress the inferior vena cava. So that kind of looks like this. And since the inferior
vena cava gathers the blood from the veins of the lower body and returns that blood to the heart, the compression of the inferior vena cava means that less blood is
pushed back to the heart, meaning that less blood is
pumped out with each heartbeat. And that leads to low blood
pressure, or hypotension. Right? So that's where the "Hypotensive" in this name comes from. So the woman starts to feel light headed and like she's about to faint, especially when she's on her back, because that's the position,
when she's on her back, that's the position in
which the uterus is exerting the most pressure on
the inferior vena cava. A really quick way to resolve that issue is for the woman to turn to her left side, and that tilts the uterus to the left and off of the inferior vena cava, allowing more blood to
return to the heart. So that's all or most of
the functional changes that occur with the cardiovascular
system in pregnancy. And the growing uterus also
shifts the heart to the left a little, so there are also
some anatomical changes, too. Now, I know that's a lot of information, but the cardiovascular system
undergoes lots of changes to support the pregnancy. So now let's move on to what changes occur in the respiratory system. So oxygen. Okay. Oxygen consumption increases in pregnancy. Right? The fetus uses oxygen,
the mom is using more oxygen to support all the changes in the body. So that means that mom's body needs to bring in more oxygen into the blood. And that's mostly done by increasing minute ventilation. It's mostly done by
increasing minute ventilation, or the volume of air that's taken in each minute. And it's not that pregnant ladies intentionally take deeper breaths, because that would get really
uncomfortable very quickly. It's all that progesterone once again. So it's all that
progesterone in the blood. And what that progesterone does is, it acts on the central respiratory centers in the brain to instruct the lungs to take in more air with each breath. So that's how you end up with more air being taken in with each breath during pregnancy. And a quick thing that needs
to be mentioned is that, when you have more air being
inhaled with each breath, more carbon dioxide is being
exhaled with each breath. Right? Does that make sense? And carbon dioxide is an acid. So in order to keep the
pH of the blood balanced, the body responds to that
decrease in carbon dioxide, so that decrease in an acid, by increasing the
secretion of bicarbonate, which is a base, from the kidneys. So you have increased secretion of bicarbonate from the kidneys. So what you end up with is either normal or a very slightly alkalotic, so a slightly basic, blood pH. Okay. And lastly, there are a couple of anatomical changes, too. So, the enlarging uterus
pushes the diaphragm upwards, almost four centimeters through
the course of the pregnancy. And that would really make
it difficult to breathe. But the chest wall during pregnancy is also more mobile, it's more flexible. And your chest wall
circumference is larger. So that works to make up for that upward shift of the diaphragm. Okay, so let's finish off down here by discussing the changes
that occur with the kidney. So two things. First
thing, we said that there's an increase in blood volume
during pregnancy, right? And secondly, all of
the arteries in the body are dilated during pregnancy, including the ones that supply the kidney. So if you add those two things up, you end up with having more
blood flow to the kidney. And what that means is,
you end up with an increase in the rate of filtration
of blood through the kidney. It's kind of like, you
know those water filters that you can attach
directly to your faucet? Right? Imagine if you had one of those. And if your pipes and your
faucet got much larger, they got much wider,
and there's more water running through the pipes,
the rate at which the water was being filtered
through the water filter would increase drastically. Well, this is the exact same thing. The kidney is just like your water filter in that it filters all of your blood. Now, with regards to the bladder, there is a contentious
topic of whether the bladder holds more or less urine
in a pregnant woman. There's some thought that progesterone, which, remember, causes
relaxation of smooth muscle, relaxes and increases the
capacity of the bladder. And then there's other
thought that the pressure of the uterus, the large
uterus on the bladder, decreases the capacity of the bladder. So we're not entirely sure. But one thing is certain, and
that is that pregnant women definitely urinate more
frequently than normal. And that has to do with
increased urine production, as well as that pressure on
the bladder from the uterus. And that pressure from the uterus also leads to dilatation of the ureter. So the ureters become dilated. And that's really important. And it kind of looks like this, where the pressure from the larger uterus causes the ureters to become
wider, to become dilated. And that uterus putting pressure here sort of acts as a road block. And urine builds up in the
ureters behind that road block. That built-up stagnant urine acts as a medium for
bacterial growth, right? Because we know urinary
stasis is a risk factor for bacterial growth. And that's perhaps why pregnant women are more susceptible to
developing pyelonephritis, or infection of the kidney, than are non-pregnant women. It's because of that urinary stasis that occurs as a result
of the large uterus putting pressure on the ureters. All right. So those are some of the physiologic changes
that occur in pregnancy, with the cardiovascular system, the respiratory system,
and the renal system.