Ruptured ectopic pregnancy is a life-threatening surgical emergency requiring immediate resuscitation and operative intervention. It accounts for 2.7% of pregnancy-related deaths and is the leading cause of maternal mortality in the first trimester. [1-2] The following is a comprehensive clinical summary organized for emergency medicine and primary care workflows.
1. History
- Key HPI questions: Last menstrual period (LMP), sexual activity, contraceptive use, prior positive pregnancy test, IVF/ART use
- Classic triad: Amenorrhea + vaginal bleeding + abdominal/pelvic pain — though all three are present in a minority of cases
- Pain characterization: May be unilateral or bilateral, localized or generalized, dull/sharp/crampy; tubal rupture classically causes sudden, severe, generalized abdominal pain that may initially improve briefly after rupture [3]
- Shoulder pain (Kehr sign): Referred pain from diaphragmatic irritation by hemoperitoneum — a late and ominous sign [3]
- Vaginal bleeding: Typically light, intermittent spotting (from decidual sloughing), rarely exceeds menstrual flow; passage of tissue (decidual cast) does not rule out ectopic [3-4]
- Important negatives: Syncope/presyncope, dizziness, orthostatic symptoms, fever, dysuria, GI symptoms
2. Alarm Features
- Hemodynamic instability: Hypotension, tachycardia, diaphoresis, altered mental status [3-4]
- Peritoneal signs: Rebound tenderness, guarding, rigidity — suggest hemoperitoneum
- Shoulder pain: Indicates significant intraperitoneal hemorrhage irritating the diaphragm [3]
- Syncope or near-syncope in a reproductive-age female — always rule out ruptured ectopic
- Positive pregnancy test + shock = ruptured ectopic until proven otherwise
- Any patient with hemodynamic instability or peritoneal signs and a positive pregnancy test should have immediate OB/GYN surgical consultation [3][5]
3. Medications
- Methotrexate is absolutely contraindicated in ruptured ectopic pregnancy — it is reserved only for hemodynamically stable, unruptured cases with β-hCG <5,000, no fetal cardiac activity, mass <4 cm, and reliable follow-up [5-6]
- Resuscitation medications: Crystalloid IV fluids, blood products (pRBCs, consider massive transfusion protocol), vasopressors if needed
- RhoGAM (anti-D immunoglobulin): Administer to all Rh-negative patients
- Analgesics: IV opioids for pain control; avoid NSAIDs if coagulopathy suspected
- Avoid delays for any medication that would postpone surgical intervention
4. Diet
- NPO status immediately upon suspicion of ruptured ectopic — surgical intervention is anticipated
- Not applicable for acute management; dietary counseling is relevant only in post-operative recovery
5. Review of Systems
- GYN: Vaginal bleeding, pelvic pain, dyspareunia, prior abnormal Pap or STI history
- GI: Nausea/vomiting (common in pregnancy and with hemoperitoneum), diarrhea, rectal pressure
- GU: Dysuria, urinary frequency (may mimic UTI)
- Neuro: Lightheadedness, syncope, visual changes (signs of hypovolemia)
- Constitutional: Fatigue, weakness, diaphoresis
6. Collateral History and Family History
- Collateral: Confirm LMP, pregnancy awareness, recent sexual partners, prior ED visits for pelvic pain/bleeding, IVF history
- Family history: Generally not a major contributor, though familial predisposition to endometriosis or tubal abnormalities may be relevant
- Social context: Access to follow-up care, transportation, social support — critical for any patient initially considered for non-surgical management of unruptured ectopic [6]
7. Risk Factors
- Prior ectopic pregnancy (strongest risk factor — 10× increased risk)
- History of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) / chlamydia / gonorrhea [1][6]
- Prior tubal surgery (tubal ligation, salpingostomy, tubal reanastomosis)
- Current IUD use (does not increase absolute risk, but if pregnancy occurs with IUD in place, higher proportion are ectopic)
- Cigarette smoking (dose-dependent, impairs tubal motility) [1][6]
- Infertility and assisted reproductive technology (IVF/IUI)
- Age >35 years [7]
- Endometriosis, DES exposure
- Important: A significant number of patients with ectopic pregnancy have no identifiable risk factors [7]
8. Differential Diagnosis
- Ruptured hemorrhagic ovarian cyst — sudden pain, hemoperitoneum possible, but pregnancy test negative
- Ovarian torsion — acute unilateral pain, nausea/vomiting, may be pregnant or not
- Threatened/incomplete miscarriage — vaginal bleeding with open os, IUP on ultrasound
- Appendicitis — RLQ pain, fever, leukocytosis; always check pregnancy test
- Heterotopic pregnancy — coexisting IUP and ectopic (rare spontaneously ~1:30,000, but up to 1:100 with IVF)
- Ruptured splenic artery aneurysm — rare but catastrophic in pregnancy
- Placental abruption — later in pregnancy
- Distinguishing feature: Positive pregnancy test + no IUP on TVUS + free fluid = ruptured ectopic until proven otherwise [6][8]
9. Past Medical History
- Prior ectopic pregnancies and their management (medical vs. surgical)
- Prior pelvic/abdominal surgeries (adhesion risk)
- History of PID, STIs, endometriosis
- Infertility treatments
- Bleeding disorders or anticoagulant use
- Rh status
10. Physical Exam
- Vitals: Tachycardia and hypotension are late signs — may be initially compensated in young patients [3-4]
- Abdomen: Diffuse tenderness, rebound, guarding, rigidity, distension (hemoperitoneum)
- Pelvic exam:
- Cervical motion tenderness (chandelier sign) — highly suggestive
- Adnexal tenderness ± palpable adnexal mass
- Closed cervical os (open os suggests miscarriage)
- Vaginal bleeding — typically dark, scant
- Skin: Pallor, diaphoresis, delayed capillary refill
- Rectal: Fullness in cul-de-sac (blood pooling in pouch of Douglas)
11. Lab Studies
- Quantitative serum β-hCG: Confirms pregnancy; level does not reliably predict rupture — ruptured ectopic can occur at any β-hCG level, including very low levels [9]
- CBC: Baseline hemoglobin/hematocrit — lower preoperative Hgb associated with rupture; serial Hgb to track ongoing hemorrhage [10]
- Type and screen / crossmatch: Essential — anticipate need for transfusion
- Coagulation studies: PT/INR, fibrinogen if massive hemorrhage suspected (DIC risk)
- BMP: Renal function, electrolytes
- Blood gas (VBG/ABG): Lactate for perfusion assessment
- Rh status: For RhoGAM administration
- Urinalysis: Rule out UTI as confounder
12. Imaging
- First-line: Transvaginal ultrasound (TVUS) — single best diagnostic modality [11]
- Findings: Empty uterus + adnexal mass (tubal ring sign) ± free fluid
- Free fluid in the cul-de-sac and paracolic gutters strongly suggests hemoperitoneum from rupture [8]
- Echogenic free fluid (clotted blood) is more concerning than anechoic fluid
- Transabdominal ultrasound: Supplement to quantify free fluid in upper abdomen (Morison's pouch, splenorenal recess)
- Bedside FAST exam: Rapid assessment for free fluid in the unstable patient — do not delay surgery for formal imaging
- CT abdomen/pelvis: Not first-line but may identify hemoperitoneum if ectopic not initially suspected
- MRI: Rarely indicated acutely; may help with non-tubal ectopic locations
- When imaging is unnecessary: If the patient is hemodynamically unstable with a positive pregnancy test and clinical signs of rupture — proceed directly to OR [5]
13. Special Tests
- Bedside FAST/POCUS: Rapid identification of free fluid — critical in the unstable patient
- Culdocentesis: Historically used to confirm hemoperitoneum (aspiration of non-clotting blood from cul-de-sac); largely replaced by ultrasound but may still be useful in resource-limited settings
- Serial β-hCG trending: Not applicable in ruptured ectopic (used for pregnancy of unknown location); in ruptured cases, do not delay for serial values
- Discriminatory zone concept: β-hCG >3,500 mIU/mL with no IUP on TVUS is highly suggestive of ectopic, but rupture can occur well below this threshold [5-6]
14. ECG
- Indications: Obtain in patients with significant hemorrhage, tachycardia, or hemodynamic instability
- Expected findings: Sinus tachycardia
- Concerning patterns: ST changes or arrhythmias suggesting myocardial ischemia from hypovolemic shock
- Primarily used to assess cardiovascular status pre-operatively
15. Assessment
Ruptured ectopic pregnancy is a clinical diagnosis in the unstable patient — do not delay definitive treatment for confirmatory testing. The classic presentation is a reproductive-age female with abdominal pain, vaginal bleeding, amenorrhea, and hemodynamic instability with a positive pregnancy test. [3-4]
- Severity stratification:
- Compensated shock: Tachycardia, normal or borderline BP, mild peritoneal signs
- Decompensated shock: Hypotension, altered mental status, diffuse peritonitis
- Atypical presentations: Pain may be minimal or absent; β-hCG may be very low; high-altitude physiology can mask anemia; young patients may compensate until sudden cardiovascular collapse [9]
- Complications: Hemorrhagic shock, DIC, multiorgan failure, death, future infertility, recurrent ectopic pregnancy
16. Treatment Plan
Initial stabilization (simultaneous with diagnosis)
- Two large-bore IVs (16–18G), aggressive fluid resuscitation
- Activate massive transfusion protocol if hemodynamically unstable
- Type and crossmatch; transfuse uncrossmatched O-negative pRBCs if critical
- NPO, Foley catheter, continuous monitoring
Definitive treatment
- Emergent surgical intervention is mandatory for ruptured ectopic [5]
- Laparoscopic salpingectomy is the preferred approach when feasible [6][12]
- Laparotomy is indicated for massive hemorrhage, hemodynamic instability precluding laparoscopy, or dense adhesions [6]
- Salpingectomy is preferred over salpingostomy when the tube is ruptured [6]
- Salpingostomy may be considered if the contralateral tube is damaged/absent and future fertility is desired, though it carries higher risk of persistent trophoblast (requiring post-op β-hCG monitoring and possible methotrexate) [6]
Post-operative
- Serial β-hCG to confirm resolution to <5 mIU/mL (especially after salpingostomy)
- RhoGAM if Rh-negative
- Contraceptive counseling; delay conception ≥3 months if methotrexate was used [5]
- Mental health screening — pregnancy loss and ectopic pregnancy carry significant psychological burden [2]
The following figure from the 2025 NEJM review illustrates the treatment algorithm for stable tubal ectopic pregnancy (note: ruptured ectopic bypasses this algorithm and goes directly to surgery):
17. Disposition
- All ruptured ectopic pregnancies require admission — typically to the OR directly, then post-operative inpatient monitoring
- Admission criteria: Hemodynamic instability, need for transfusion, post-surgical monitoring, ongoing pain
- ICU admission: Consider for patients with massive hemorrhage, DIC, or persistent hemodynamic instability post-operatively
- Specialist consultation: OB/GYN — emergent, at time of diagnosis; do not delay for any reason [1][7]
- Transfer: If OB/GYN surgical capability is not available, initiate resuscitation and arrange emergent transfer
18. Follow Up / Return Precautions
- Post-operative follow-up: OB/GYN within 1–2 weeks; serial β-hCG weekly until undetectable
- Return precautions (counsel patient):
- Return immediately for increasing abdominal pain, heavy vaginal bleeding, fever, dizziness/syncope, or shoulder pain
- Wound care instructions for laparoscopic/laparotomy sites
- Expected recovery: Return to usual activities within ~2 weeks for laparoscopic approach [6]
- Future pregnancy counseling:
- Recurrent ectopic risk is approximately 6–7% after one ectopic [13]
- Early ultrasound in subsequent pregnancies to confirm intrauterine location
- Future live birth rate ~45–52% depending on treatment modality [13]
- Psychological support: Screen for grief, anxiety, PTSD — ectopic pregnancy loss is often underrecognized as a significant psychological event [2]
References
1. Ectopic Pregnancy: Diagnosis and Management. — Hendriks E, Rosenberg R, Prine L. American Family Physician. 2020.
2. Ectopic Pregnancy. — Chong KY, de Waard L, Oza M, et al. Nature Reviews. Disease Primers. 2024.
3. Does This Woman Have an Ectopic Pregnancy?The Rational Clinical Examination Systematic Review. — Crochet JR, Bastian LA, Chireau MV. The Journal of the American Medical Association. 2013.
4. Ectopic Pregnancy. — Barnhart KT. The New England Journal of Medicine. 2009.
5. ACOG Practice Bulletin No. 193: Tubal Ectopic Pregnancy. — Committee on Practice Bulletins—GynecologyThis Practice Bulletin was developed by the Committee on Practice Bulletins—Gynecology in collaboration with Kurt T Obstetrics and Gynecology. 2018.
6. Tubal Ectopic Pregnancy. — Schreiber CA, Sonalkar S. The New England Journal of Medicine. 2025.
7. Updates in Emergency Medicine: Ectopic Pregnancy. — Jeffers K, Koyfman A, Long B. The American Journal of Emergency Medicine. 2024.
8. ACR Appropriateness Criteria® First Trimester Vaginal Bleeding: 2025 Update. — Expert Panel on GYN and OB Imaging, Laifer-Narin SL, Fruauff A, et al. Journal of the American College of Radiology : JACR. 2025.
9. An Acute Pelvic Pain in High-Altitude Tourist: A Case Report of Ruptured Ectopic Pregnancy With Low Β-Human Chorionic Gonadotropin. — Yuan F, Cui ZC, Jiang ZZ, Liu XT. Medicine. 2025.
10. Risk Factors and Clinical Characteristics Associated With a Ruptured Ectopic Pregnancy: A 19-Year Retrospective Observational Study. — Li PC, Lin WY, Ding DC. Medicine. 2022.
11. ACR Appropriateness Criteria® Acute Pelvic Pain in the Reproductive Age Group: 2023 Update. — Brook OR, Dadour JR, Robbins JB, et al. Journal of the American College of Radiology : JACR. 2024.
12. The Diagnosis and Management of Extrauterine and Uterine Ectopic Pregnancy. — Farren J, Al Wattar BH, Jurkovic D. Human Reproduction Update. 2025.
13. Pregnancy Outcomes Following Medical Versus Surgical Treatment of Tubal Ectopic Pregnancy: A Population-Based Retrospective Cohort Study. — Rosen A, Palma L, Ordon M, et al. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. 2025.