OBJECTIVE This study sought to investigate the effect of Bakri balloon use and vaginal tamponade combined with abdominal compression for the management of postpartum hemorrhage (PPH). METHODS This retrospective study… Click to show full abstract
OBJECTIVE This study sought to investigate the effect of Bakri balloon use and vaginal tamponade combined with abdominal compression for the management of postpartum hemorrhage (PPH). METHODS This retrospective study reviewed cases of PPH in the International Peace Maternal and Child Health Hospital of China Welfare Institution in Shanghai, China from January 1, 2010 to December 31, 2015. A single use of the intrauterine Bakri balloon was applied in some cases, and additional vaginal tamponade combined with abdominal compression (double compression) was applied in other cases. The authors evaluated the effect of these two methods in the management of PPH. RESULTS The Bakri balloon was used in 305 cases of intrauterine PPH, and the clinical efficacy was 93.26%. One group of study patients underwent double compression, and these patients had a better clinical efficacy rate of 96.3% (157 of 163), whereas the efficacy in cases using the Bakri balloon alone (control group) was 87.3% (124 of 142). The postoperative complication rates of these two groups were 9.4% and 8.7%, respectively. Uterine arterial embolization was performed in patients in whom Bakri balloon use failed. None of the cases resulted in a hysterectomy. CONCLUSION Intrauterine Bakri balloon use combined with vaginal tamponade and abdominal compression is more effective in the treatment of PPH compared with Bakri balloon use alone. This method does not increase postoperative complications. Uterine atony with placenta previa or implantation may be possible reasons for noneffectiveness of Bakri balloon use.
               
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