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Algorithms & Diagnostics

HELLP Syndrome Simplified: Workup, Stabilization, and Delivery Pathways for Step 2 CK

December 15, 2025 · MDSteps
HELLP Syndrome Simplified: Workup, Stabilization, and Delivery Pathways for Step 2 CK

Understanding HELLP Syndrome and Why Step 2 CK Tests It

HELLP syndrome (“Hemolysis, Elevated Liver enzymes, Low Platelets”) is one of the highest-yield obstetric emergencies tested on Step 2 CK. Any patient with preeclampsia who deteriorates with RUQ pain, worsening hypertension, rising AST/ALT, or falling platelets should activate your mental HELLP syndrome step 2 ck algorithm immediately. The exam rewards rapid pattern recognition, correct stabilization order, and delivery decisions based on maternal status and gestational age.

On the wards, HELLP is a true obstetric emergency. On the exam, it is a timing and prioritization emergency. Every vignette hinges on these elements:

  • Recognize evolving severe features
  • Interpret the diagnostic labs
  • Start magnesium sulfate before complications
  • Control blood pressure quickly
  • Stabilize → evaluate → deliver

MDSteps’ Adaptive QBank frequently includes HELLP scenarios that simulate real clinical deterioration curves, forcing students to differentiate HELLP from acute fatty liver of pregnancy, DIC, TTP, and worsening preeclampsia. This article breaks down each critical step with a clean, exam-ready decision pathway.

Diagnostic Criteria and Lab Interpretation in HELLP

The diagnosis of HELLP is laboratory-driven. The exam often provides subtle early shifts. Recognizing them quickly ensures you avoid the classic traps: assuming it is biliary colic, hepatitis, or worsening preeclampsia without severe features.

ParameterExam ThresholdMeaning
HemolysisAbnormal smear, ↑LDH > 600, ↓HaptoglobinMicroangiopathic destruction
Liver EnzymesAST/ALT ≥ 70Hepatocellular injury from periportal necrosis
Platelets< 100,000Consumption + endothelial activation

The Step 2 CK nuance: hemolysis is required. Rising AST/ALT and falling platelets alone may indicate “preeclampsia with severe features,” not HELLP. Many NBME questions try to bait you with RUQ pain + low platelets before providing LDH or smear.

Common Step 2 CK Confusion Points

  • DIC: prolonged PT/PTT and very low fibrinogen (HELLP has normal or slightly low fibrinogen)
  • Acute fatty liver of pregnancy: severe hypoglycemia, profound coagulopathy, encephalopathy
  • TTP: neurologic deficits + renal involvement + normal BP

When in doubt, think: HELLP = hemolysis + liver injury + low platelets in a hypertensive pregnancy.

Stabilization First: The Initial HELLP Algorithm

The first phase of the HELLP syndrome step 2 ck algorithm is stabilization. The exam always tests that maternal stabilization precedes delivery decisions.

Immediate Priorities
  1. Secure ABCs
  2. Place two large-bore IVs
  3. Begin magnesium sulfate seizure prophylaxis
  4. Lower severe-range blood pressures promptly
  5. Order stat CBC, CMP, LDH, coags, type & screen

On Step 2 CK, missing magnesium sulfate is the most common error. Many students try to “fix the platelets,” “treat the LFTs,” or “give steroids for fetal lung maturity” first. But magnesium sulfate must be initiated immediately whenever severe features or HELLP are suspected.

If at any point the patient seizes, treat with an additional IV bolus of magnesium and prepare for urgent delivery after stabilization.

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Blood Pressure Targets, Medication Choices, and Step 2 CK Traps

HELLP almost always presents with severe-range pressures (≥160/110). The goal is to lower systolic BP to 140–150 and diastolic to 90–100 to prevent stroke while maintaining uteroplacental perfusion.

Medications You Must Know Cold

  • IV labetalol (fast onset, avoid in asthma)
  • IV hydralazine (direct vasodilator)
  • PO immediate-release nifedipine (great when IV access delaying BP control)

Do not use ACE inhibitors, nitroprusside, or diuretics unless pulmonary edema is present. The exam loves to include nitroprusside as a trap answer—never choose it in pregnancy.

Management must occur in parallel with magnesium infusion and preparation for delivery.

Delivery Timing: The Core of the HELLP Syndrome Algorithm

HELLP is a maternal indication for immediate delivery regardless of gestational age. But Step 2 CK tests whether the student stabilizes the mother first.

Delivery Decision Summary

  • ≥ 34 weeks: Deliver after maternal stabilization
  • < 34 weeks but unstable mother: Deliver immediately
  • < 34 weeks & stable: Brief stabilization → deliver; do not delay > 24 hours
  • Mode: Vaginal preferred if no contraindications; C-section if unstable or induction not possible

A common NBME trap is suggesting “continue pregnancy with close monitoring.” This is never appropriate in HELLP. Delivery is mandatory once stabilization steps are completed.

Postpartum Course, Complications, and Red Flags

HELLP may worsen postpartum before it improves—something Step 2 CK tests repeatedly. Platelets may continue to decline for up to 48 hours.

Complications to Recognize on the Exam

  • Subcapsular liver hematoma (sudden RUQ pain + shock)
  • DIC (oozing at IV sites + prolonged PT/PTT)
  • Seizures despite magnesium (give additional bolus)
  • Acute renal injury
  • Pulmonary edema

Continue magnesium sulfate for 24 hours postpartum. Any withdrawal of magnesium before that window is incorrect unless toxicity occurs.

MDSteps’ analytics dashboard helps track these details across QBank performance, showing whether a student consistently misses postpartum deterioration questions—an early indicator of readiness gaps.

Differentiating HELLP From Other Microangiopathies on Exams

Several life-threatening conditions mimic HELLP. Step 2 CK expects quick distinction based on labs and blood pressure context.

ConditionDistinguishing Features
TTPAMS, renal failure, fever; normal BP; ADAMTS13 deficiency
AFLPHypoglycemia, profound coagulopathy, encephalopathy
DICMarkedly prolonged PT/PTT, very low fibrinogen
Severe PreeclampsiaNo hemolysis; platelets often >100k

Rapid-Review Checklist (Exam-Day Essentials)

  • HELLP = hemolysis + AST/ALT ≥ 70 + platelets < 100k
  • RUQ/epigastric pain is the earliest high-yield clue
  • Start magnesium immediately—before further workup
  • Lower BP to 140–150/90–100 with IV labetalol or hydralazine
  • Delivery is required → never observe expectantly
  • C-section only when maternal status unstable or induction impossible
  • Watch for subcapsular liver hematoma postpartum

Medically reviewed by: Arianna K., MD — OB/GYN

About MDSteps: When You Know the Algorithm… But Pick the Wrong Branch

If you keep missing “easy algorithm questions,” it’s usually one missed constraint — not ignorance.

The pivot is hidden in plain sight: timing, stability, red flags, contraindications, or “most appropriate next.” Miss that one line, and suddenly multiple choices look “kind of right.”

MDSteps trains constraint-based thinking: identify the trigger, spot the disqualifier, and follow the forced next step. That’s how algorithms become automatic under pressure — not by rereading flowcharts.

  • Signal vs noise breakdowns that highlight the branch point.
  • Choice-level why-wrong showing the one detail that kills each option.
  • Pattern tags that reveal your recurring diagnostic failure modes.

Make algorithms automatic

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