## Correct Answer: C. Antibiotics+Heparin Septic pelvic thrombophlebitis (SPT) is a life-threatening postpartum/obstetric infection characterized by thrombosis of pelvic veins (ovarian, uterine, or iliac) with bacterial seeding. The pathophysiology involves endothelial injury from infection, venous stasis, and hypercoagulability of pregnancy—creating a thromboinflammatory state. Management requires dual therapy: antibiotics alone cannot resolve the thrombus, and anticoagulation alone cannot control the underlying infection. Heparin is the anticoagulant of choice in pregnancy and postpartum because it does not cross the placenta (unlike warfarin) and has rapid onset. The combination of broad-spectrum antibiotics (covering gram-negative, gram-positive, and anaerobes—typically ampicillin + gentamicin + clindamycin per Indian obstetric guidelines) plus therapeutic heparin addresses both the septic and thrombotic components. Heparin prevents thrombus propagation, reduces septic emboli, and improves microvascular perfusion. Clinical response is typically seen within 48–72 hours; persistent fever despite appropriate therapy may warrant imaging (CT/MRI) to exclude abscess, but surgery is not first-line. This approach aligns with ACOG and Indian obstetric practice guidelines for SPT management. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Surgical embolectomy** — Embolectomy is reserved for massive pulmonary embolism with hemodynamic collapse or acute limb ischemia—not the primary treatment for SPT. SPT is managed medically first; surgery is considered only if there is septic shock unresponsive to antibiotics + heparin, or if imaging reveals an undrained abscess. Jumping to surgery without medical optimization is a common NBE trap that ignores the septic-thrombotic nature of the condition. **B. Hysterectomy** — Hysterectomy is not indicated in uncomplicated SPT and represents overtreatment in a young woman of reproductive age. It may be considered only in cases of uterine necrosis, uncontrolled sepsis despite maximal medical therapy, or if there is a retained product of conception causing persistent infection. First-line management is always medical (antibiotics + heparin), not surgical. **D. Stop antibiotics and start heparin** — This is a dangerous trap. Stopping antibiotics would allow unchecked bacterial proliferation and sepsis progression, leading to septic shock and multi-organ failure. Both antibiotics and heparin are essential—neither can substitute for the other. The infection must be treated while the thrombus is simultaneously anticoagulated. This option tests whether students understand that SPT is a dual pathology requiring dual therapy. ## High-Yield Facts - **Septic pelvic thrombophlebitis** is a postpartum/obstetric infection with thrombosis of pelvic veins (ovarian, uterine, iliac); presents as persistent fever despite antibiotics. - **Dual therapy (antibiotics + heparin)** is the gold standard: antibiotics control infection, heparin prevents thrombus propagation and septic emboli. - **Heparin is preferred over warfarin** in pregnancy and postpartum because it does not cross the placenta and has rapid anticoagulant onset. - **Typical antibiotic regimen** in India: ampicillin + gentamicin + clindamycin (covering gram-negative, gram-positive, and anaerobes). - **Clinical response** is expected within 48–72 hours; persistent fever warrants imaging (CT/MRI) to exclude abscess, not immediate surgery. - **Risk factors** include cesarean delivery, prolonged labor, manual removal of placenta, and intrauterine instrumentation. ## Mnemonics **SPT Management = BOTH** **B**road-spectrum **A**ntibiotics + **H**eparin + **O**bservation + **T**herapeutic monitoring. Both the infection and thrombus must be treated simultaneously; neither monotherapy is sufficient. **Why Heparin in Pregnancy?** **H**eparin = **H**igh molecular weight, **H**ydrophilic → does NOT cross placenta. Warfarin crosses placenta and causes fetal abnormalities; heparin is safe and rapid-acting. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "fever unresponsive to antibiotics" with surgical options (embolectomy, hysterectomy) to trap students who think persistent fever = treatment failure requiring surgery. In reality, SPT requires dual medical therapy (antibiotics + heparin), and fever typically resolves within 48–72 hours of combined treatment. Surgery is reserved for complications (abscess, uterine necrosis, uncontrolled sepsis). ## Clinical Pearl In Indian obstetric practice, SPT is often diagnosed late because fever is initially attributed to routine postpartum infection. The key discriminator is **persistent fever despite appropriate antibiotics**—this should immediately trigger imaging and consideration of anticoagulation. Many maternal deaths from SPT occur when surgery is pursued without first optimizing medical therapy with heparin. _Reference: DC Dutta's Textbook of Obstetrics (7th ed.), Ch. 24 (Puerperal Sepsis); Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, Ch. 155 (Sepsis)_
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