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Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013
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Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013. Definitions Some anatomy Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOGMarch 2013

Page 2: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

Definitions

Some anatomy

Repair of 2nd degree obstetric injury Risk factors for 3rd & 4th degree

tears

The identification of 30 & 40 tears

Management of 30 & 40 tears

Avoiding obstetric injury

Pregnancy after previous 30 & 40 tears

Page 3: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

Cochrane database Pubmed RCOG Guidelines (March 2007) NICE Guidelines for Intrapartum

Care (September 2007) Google Personal experience

Page 4: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

1st degree perineal injury• Involves skin only

2nd degree injury• Involves perineal muscles (or perineal body)

but not the anal sphincter 3rd degree tear

• Involves the anal sphincter complex but not the mucosa of the anal canal or rectum

• 3a = Less than 50% of the external AS• 3b = More than 50% of the external AS but

the internal anal sphincter is intact• 3c = Both external & internal AS torn

4th degree tear• Both external & internal AS is torn and the

epithelium of the anal canal or rectum is breached

Page 5: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.
Page 6: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

2nd degree trauma occurs in 16 – 90% of deliveries

Depends largely on whether restricted or liberal use of episiotomy is practised

Overall incidence of 3rd & 4th degree tears is 1:100 deliveries (1%)

But studies with endoanal ultrasound indicate that damage to the EAC occurs in up to 40% of vaginal births

Page 7: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.
Page 8: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.
Page 9: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

RISK FACTOR ODDS RATIO

Nulliparity (primigravidity) 3–4

    Short perineal body 8

Instrumental delivery, overall 3

    Forceps-assisted delivery 3–7

    Vacuum-assisted delivery 3

    Forceps vs vacuum 2.88*

    Forceps with midline episiotomy 25

Prolonged second stage of labor (>1 hour)

1.5–4

Epidural analgesia 1.5–3

Intrapartum infant factors:

    Birthweight over 4 kg 2

    Persistent occipitoposterior position

2–3

Episiotomy, mediolateral 1.4

Episiotomy, midline 3–5

Previous anal sphincter tear 4

All variables are statistically significant at P<.05.

Page 10: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

Requires systematic exam by a competent & experienced person

Extent of injury to be determined before repair commences

Analgesia• May require GA or regional block

Good light and exposure Must do a PR if sphincter damage

or 4th degree trauma is suspect• Use a second glove and discard

When the extent of injury is uncertain it is best to presume the worst

Page 11: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

Use inert rapidly dissolving absorbable suture material

Use continuous suturing for all layers not interrupted

Less pain Bury the knots and warn the women

about how long the suture may be present

To theatre for GA or regional block if 30 or 40 tear is diagnosed or suspected• Some 3a trauma is suitable for repair under LA by

infiltration Use 2/0 or 3/0 Vicryl or PDS for sphincter

repair Retrieve and repair retracted sphincter

end to end or by overlap separate suture• One study had better results from overlap

repair Use NSAID as a rectal suppository

Page 12: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

End to end repair

Overlap repair

Page 13: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

Antibiotics after 30 or 40 tear • One RCT in support • Use broad spectrum plus Metronidazole

Laxatives for 7 – 10 days• Use stool softener and bulking agent

Offer physio with pelvic floor exercises Review by obstetrician after 6 – 8w Assess symptoms systematically Refer for endoanal ultrasound and

rectal manometry if there are symptoms of incontinence

The relevance of ultrasound abnormalities in asymptomatic women is uncertain

Page 14: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

1. Passage of any flatus when socially undesirable

2. Any incontinence of liquid stool

3. Any need to wear a pad because of anal symptoms

4. Any incontinence of solid stool

5. Any fecal urgency (inability to defer defecation for more than 5 minutes)

SCALE

0 Never

1 Rarely (<1/month)

2 Sometimes (1/week–1/month

3 Usually (1/day–1/week)

4 Always (>1/day)

A score of 0 implies complete continence and 20 complete incontinence.

A score of 6 suggested as a cut-off to determine need for evaluation.

Page 15: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

An evidence-based approach

Page 16: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

Seven RCT’s with 5001 women and 8 cohort studies with 6463 women. Meta analysis confirms that restricted episiotomy will result in:

Less posterior trauma (RR 0.87, CI 0.83 - 0.91) More anterior trauma (RR 1.75, CI 1.52 - 2.01) Fewer 30 and 40 tears (RR 0.74, CI 0.42 - 1.28)

Some studies also point to: Overall more intact perineums Less perineal pain Quicker return to coitus with restricted use of

episiotomy and More anal sphincter damage with liberal

episiotomy But no difference in…

Sexual function at 3m & 3 yrs or bladder function

Page 17: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

Routine episiotomy is not recommended for spontaneous birth

Episiotomy should be performed when clinically indicated • e.g. fetal compromise suspected or

instruments required

Mediolateral episiotomy is best • i.e. start at the posterior fouchette and

proceed at an angle of 45 - 60 degrees

Tested anaesthesia is required• Except in an extreme emergency

Page 18: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.
Page 19: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

A case control study showed that episiotomies that:• Begin close to the posterior fourchette• Are <15 and >60 degrees from the axis• Are too short• Or not deep enough

Are associated with an increased risk of anal sphincter injury

Page 20: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

One large RCT in Australia (1340 women in 3 sites) of midwife massage between contractions in the second stage:

No effect on any measure of obstetric trauma, pain, return to coitus or urinary and bowel function

There was no apparent measure of compliance

But the study is confirmed by a US RCT of 1211 women in which compliance was high

The Epi-No device (a self-performed progressive dilation of the perineum from 36 weeks) significantly increases the rate of intact perineum in nullipara and appears safe

Page 21: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

2001 – a prospective trial of 50 nullipara (published in German)• Significant reduction in the rate of episiotomy (49%

vs 82%)• Fewer “perineal tears” (2% vs 4%)• Shorter 2nd stage (mean 29 vs 54 minutes)

2004 – a prospective trial of 31 nullipara in Singapore• Used the device for a mean of 2.1 weeks• Fewer episiotomies (50% vs 93%)• Overall trauma rate 90% vs 97% but the trauma

appeared “less severe”• The device was “safe”

2004 – Pilot study from Melbourne Aust. of 48 nullipara• Significantly more intact perineums (46% vs 17%)• Reduced rate of episiotomy (26% vs 34%)• Shorter second stage (mean 61 vs 81 minutes)• No effect on instrumental delivery rate or Apgars

Page 22: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

2009 – A RCT of 276 German nullipara (published in AustNZ J O&G)

• Significantly more intact perineums (37.4% vs 25.7%)

• A trend towards fewer episiotomies

• No effect on the rate of “tears”, duration of 2nd stage or pain

• No increased risk of infection

Page 23: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.
Page 24: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

One large US observational study (2595 women) found that:

Warm compresses reduced the need for episiotomy in nulliparas and was borderline for multiparas

Also reduced the rate of spontaneous 20

tears in both

But this was not confirmed by another US RCT of 1211 women

Page 25: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

One large UK RCT of 5316 ♀ found: A small reduction in perineal pain at 10 days

from “hands on” No difference in any measure of obstetric

trauma Inexplicably fewer manual removals in the

“hands poised” group (2.6% vs 1.5%) Broadly similar findings in an

Austrian study of 1076 women But episiotomy was more common in the

“hands on” group NICE concludes that either

technique is appropriate And noted evidence that there is less trauma

when the head delivers between contractions

Page 26: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

One RCT of 185 women found that:

No effect on perineal pain But less dyspareunia when coitus was

resumed And fewer second degree tears in the

treated group (RR 0.63, CI 0.42 – 0.93)

But NICE concludes that Lignocaine spray should not be used

Page 27: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

There are no prospective trials and only a few retrospective studies

The risk of repeat 30 and 40 trauma is similar to the original incidence

There is some evidence that if the woman is asymptomatic then vaginal birth does not further increase the risk of those symptoms

There is some evidence that for symptomatic women then vaginal birth does increase the severity of those symptoms

Page 28: Max Brinsmead PhD FRANZCOG March 2013.  Definitions  Some anatomy  Repair of 2 nd degree obstetric injury  Risk factors for 3 rd & 4 th degree tears.

Routine episiotomy is not recommended

Discussion about intrapartum care should cover…

Current symptoms of dysfunction of the anal sphincter The previous trauma The risk of recurrence Success of previous repair Psychological aspects of the trauma

Then a combined decision concerning subsequent mode of birth and intrapartum care can be made