HELLP Syndrome
(Hemolysis, Elevated Liver enzymes, Low Platelet count)
🔷 INTRODUCTION
HELLP syndrome is a severe variant of preeclampsia characterized by a triad of:
- Hemolysis
- Elevated Liver enzymes
- Low Platelet count
It occurs in approximately 0.5–0.9% of all pregnancies and up to 20% of patients with severe preeclampsia.
🔷 DEFINITION & CLASSIFICATION
HELLP is a subtype of preeclampsia, often occurring between 28–36 weeks, but can also present postpartum.
🩸 Mississippi Classification (Based on platelet count):
|
Class |
Platelet Count |
AST/ALT |
LDH |
|
Class I |
<50,000/mm³ |
↑ (≥70 IU/L) |
>600 IU/L |
|
Class II |
50,000–100,000/mm³ |
↑ |
>600 IU/L |
|
Class III |
100,000–150,000/mm³ |
Mild ↑ |
>600 IU/L |
🔷 PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
- Endothelial dysfunction → Vasospasm → Microangiopathic hemolysis
- Liver ischemia from fibrin deposits in sinusoids → hepatocellular injury → elevated AST/ALT
- Platelet activation and consumption → thrombocytopenia
Microthrombi form in small vessels, causing multiorgan dysfunction (liver, kidneys, CNS, etc.).
🔷 CLINICAL FEATURES
|
Symptom |
Explanation |
|
Epigastric/RUQ pain |
Liver capsule distension |
|
Nausea/vomiting |
Common early signs |
|
Headache, visual changes |
CNS involvement |
|
Hypertension, proteinuria |
May or may not be present |
|
Jaundice |
Hemolysis or liver dysfunction |
|
Edema |
Capillary leak |
⚠️ HELLP can present without hypertension or proteinuria → Maintain high suspicion!
🔷 INVESTIGATIONS
|
Parameter |
Findings |
|
Hemoglobin |
↓ (hemolysis) |
|
Peripheral smear |
Schistocytes, helmet cells |
|
Platelets |
↓↓↓ |
|
AST/ALT |
↑ (2x–10x) |
|
LDH |
↑ (>600 IU/L = hemolysis marker) |
|
Coagulation |
May show DIC features |
|
Bilirubin |
↑ (indirect > direct) |
|
Urine output |
↓ (renal dysfunction) |
|
Proteinuria |
May be present |
🔷 DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Acute fatty liver of pregnancy
- TTP/HUS
- DIC
- Viral hepatitis
- Cholecystitis
🔷 MANAGEMENT OVERVIEW
Definitive treatment = DELIVERY OF THE BABY
🎯 Goals:
- Stabilize mother
- Prevent seizures
- Control BP
- Support organ function
- Expedite delivery (within 24–48 hrs)
🔷 MEDICAL MANAGEMENT
|
Aspect |
Treatment |
|
Seizure prophylaxis |
Magnesium sulfate |
|
BP control |
Labetalol, Hydralazine |
|
Steroids |
Dexamethasone for maternal platelet recovery (controversial); Betamethasone for fetal lungs |
|
Fluid management |
Restrictive strategy; careful input/output |
|
Blood products |
PRBCs, Platelets, FFP depending on labs |
|
ICU care |
In moderate–severe HELLP with organ dysfunction |
🔷 ANESTHETIC MANAGEMENT
📍 Pre-Anesthesia Considerations
- Review platelet count, coagulation, and LFTs
- Assess neurological status
- Plan rapid delivery if condition worsening
- Discuss with obstetrician and neonatologist
💉 Regional Anesthesia
✅ May be possible IF:
- Platelets ≥ 75,000/mm³ (some say ≥ 80,000–100,000/mm³ for spinal)
- No signs of coagulopathy
- Stable hemodynamics
Advantages:
- Less BP fluctuation
- Avoids difficult airway
⚠️ Avoid if:
- Platelets <75k
- Active bleeding, DIC, or rising LFTs
🛑 General Anesthesia
Indications:
- Coagulopathy (low platelets, ↑ PT/INR)
- Fetal distress with need for immediate delivery
- Severe hepatic/renal dysfunction
- Altered mental status (encephalopathy)
Precautions:
- Difficult airway (facial/laryngeal edema)
- Anticipate exaggerated response to laryngoscopy → use fentanyl, esmolol
- MgSO₄ potentiates NMBs (↓ dose of vecuronium, rocuronium)
- Cricoid pressure
- Rapid desaturation → preoxygenation is critical
🔷 MONITORING
- Standard ASA monitors
- Arterial line for BP monitoring, labs
- Foley catheter for U/O
- CVP if fluid management difficult
- Lab trend monitoring: platelets, LFTs, PT/INR, electrolytes
🔷 POSTPARTUM CARE
- Monitor closely for DIC, renal failure, pulmonary edema
- Continue magnesium sulfate for 24 hours
- BP control
- Platelet transfusions if count drops <50k with bleeding
- Supportive care in ICU/HDU
🔷 COMPLICATIONS
|
Maternal |
Fetal |
|
DIC |
Preterm birth |
|
Liver hematoma/rupture |
IUGR |
|
Acute renal failure |
Low APGAR |
|
Pulmonary edema |
Neonatal ICU admission |
|
Abruptio placentae |
Stillbirth (if unrecognized) |
|
Death |
– |
🔷 MCQ CORNER
|
Question |
Answer |
|
Key diagnostic marker in HELLP |
↑ LDH |
|
Most feared hepatic complication |
Subcapsular hematoma or rupture |
|
First-line anticonvulsant |
Magnesium sulfate |
|
Platelet cutoff for spinal |
≥75,000–80,000/mm³ |
|
Definitive treatment |
Delivery |

