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Introduction to Obstetric Anesthesia Dr A Alberts Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care 2007
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Obstetricanesthesia(1)

May 07, 2015

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Page 1: Obstetricanesthesia(1)

Introduction to Obstetric Anesthesia

Dr A Alberts

Department of Anesthesiology and

Critical Care2007

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INTRODUCTIONDuring obstetric anesthesia the

anesthetist controls the following

Maternal– Gas exchange, perfusion of vital organs and metabolism– Pain perception and reflexes– Skeletal muscle tone– Consciousness or unconsciousness

Fetal– Gas exchange, perfusion of vital organs, metabolism

Uterine– Myometrial tone

AND IS RESPONSIBLE FOR …..

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the maintenance ofMaternal– Physiology– Safety– Comfort

Fetal– Physiology

Surgical– Surgical conditions

This is the aim of the obstetric anesthetist

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ASA '96 162

Risks involved

Physician Insurers Association of America(PIAA)

– Malpractice claims against anesthetists– Most frequent conditions for which claims were made

–Pregnancy and birth

American Society of Anesthetists(ASA)

– Obstetric vs. non-O malpractice claims– C/S risk double that of any other procedure

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Risks involvedMedical Insurance Cover

Obstetricians in Private Practice

R76 130 (2006)

(MPS)

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ASA 2005, 402

“ It will be necessary to ascertainanesthesia’s precise effect, both upon the action of the uterus and on the assistant abdominal muscles; its influence, if any,

upon the child; whether it has a tendency to hemorrhage or other complications.”

Scottish obstetrician James Simpson after administering ether to a woman to treat the pain of childbirth

1847

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“If we could induce local anesthesia without the absence of consciousness, which occurs in general anesthesia, many would see it as

a still greater improvement.”

Sir James Young after the first maternal death due to anesthesia in England

1848

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WHAT’S DIFFERENT?Why the increased risk?

TWO IN ONE INTRA-OPERATIVE AWARENESSPHYSIOLOGY / PHARMACOLOGY !ECG CHANGESASSOCIATED PATHOLOGY

PRE-ECLAMPSIA – ECLAMPSIAHELLP – SYNDROMEANTEPARTUM HEMORRHAGERHEUMATIC HEART DISEASE

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Q VADISWhat does the anesthetist need, firstly himself to survive,

and secondly have mother and child survive too

– NORMAL VS ALTERED PHYSIOLOGY– NORMAL VS ALTERED PHARMACOLOGY

– VASCULAR ACCESS– AIRWAY MANAGEMENT– REGIONAL ANESTHESIA– RESUSCITATION

• KNOWLEDGEKNOWLEDGE

•• SKILLSSKILLS

i.e. A COMPETENT CLINICIAN!

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Altered Physiology

1. Hematological

2. Cardiovascular

3. Respiratory

4. Gastro-intestinal

5. Etc

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1 HematologicalObstetric blood loss

Normal PV delivery– 600ml

Normal PV delivery of twins– 1000ml

Caesarian section– 1000ml Substantial blood loss is to be

expected in the obstetric patient!

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1 Hematological↑ mineralocorticoid activity– Na+ retention, ↑ body H2O content↑ PV 50% and ↑ TBV 40%– Hb ↓ 10-11 gm% – S-ChE activity ↓ 20%– S-Protein ↓ < 6 gm/dl

↑ Free fraction of protein-bound drugs

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2 Cardiovascular

↓ SVR– Estrogens, progesterones– Initiated by prostacyclin↑ HR 25%↑ CO 50%

Aorta-caval compression, result ⇒supine hypotensive syndrome

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Lateral angiogram from two supine subjects

Non-pregnant Pregnant

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SHSPaleness

HypotensionSweating

TachycardiaReflex bradycardia

Nausea

Max effect36-38 weeks

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SHSPaleness

HypotensionSweating

TachycardiaReflex bradycardia

Nausea

Max effect36-38 weeks

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SHS- management -

POSITION

IV VOLUME

VASOPRESSORS

→ LATERAL

→ >1000 ML RL

→ EPHEDRINE

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ALVEOLAR VENTILATION⇑ 70% (term)

Tidal volume ↑ 40%Respiratory rate ↑ 15%

STATIC LUNGVOLUMES

UPPER AIRWAY

3 Respiratory

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Static lung volumesThe rate at which term patients change from

pink to blue is breathtakingly fast

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4 Gastro-intestinalLarge uterus– ↑ IAP– ↑ IGP ↑ Gastrin secretion– ↑ volume of gastric secretions– ↓ pH of gastric secretions↓ Gastric emptying– ↓ secretion of motilin– pain, anxiety and opioids– ↑ secretion of progesterone (↓ smooth muscle tone)

LES– ↓ tone– altered angle

Recipe for disaster i.e.ASPIRATION

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Risk aspiration

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Predicted mortality rates (%) after aspiration. Each shaded arearepresents the mortality rate interval predicted for a specific

pH and volume of solution aspirated.

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Prevention of aspirationAVOID GENERAL ANESTHESIA

NPO

PRO-KINETICS

ANTI-ACIDS

SELLICK MANEUVRE

→ SPINAL / EPIDURAL

→ FLUID

→ METOCLOPRAMIDE

→ NON PARTICULATENa CITRATE, PNEUCID

→ CRICOID PRESSURE

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Prevention of aspiration- Sellick maneuver or cricoid pressure -

All(!) patients from 12 weeks gestation.

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Altered pharmacology

↓ MAC for inhalational agents– From 8-12 weeks gestation– Due to ↑ progesterone levels

↓ dose of LA – Epidural venous engorgement – ↑ sensitivity of nerves, ? progesterone

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Regression lines for dose of epidural solution and age in nonpregnant women at term. The gravida obviously requires

much less drug.

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ASA 2005 402

WHAT’S ON OFFER?a. STANDBY (“no interference”)b. O2, N2O, OPIATESc. GENERAL ANESTHETICS

– USA; babies of 23% of pregnant women delivered by C/S (2005)

d. REGIONAL ANESTHETICS– EPIDURAL (CAUDAL)– SPINAL– COMBINED SPINAL-EPIDURAL– CONTINUOUS SPINAL– PATIENT CONTROLLED EPIDURAL ANALGESIA

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c. General anesthetics

↓↓ incidence / popularity

Risks involved– Failure to intubate– AspirationExperience of childbirth– Bonding– Presence of father

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Probably a difficult intubation!

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Motto of many an obstetric unit

“Where possible, avoid general anesthesia”

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d. REGIONAL ANESTHESIA

Potential advantages (c-section)

INABILITY TO INTUBATE

EARLY BONDING

POSTOP PAIN / MOBILIZATION

“ positive experience in childbirth “

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Regional anesthesia

I. Which drugs to use?

II. Which nerves to block?

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I. Amide Na+-channel blockers

LignocaineBupivacaine Macaine

Ropivacaine Naropin

L-Bupivacaine Chirocaine

- with/without opiates/epinephrine -

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II. AnatomyEarly labor– T11 - T12Progressing cervical dilatation– T10 - L1 Second stage– S2 – 4– distention of vaginal vault and perineum

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International Headache Society ASA '05 103

PDPHBilateral; frontal, occipital or both– May involve neck and upper shoulders

Develops < 7days following LP– Generally < 48hours– > 3days in 25% of cases

Disappears < 14days following LPWorsens < 15min assuming upright positionImproves < 30min assuming recumbent position

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PDPHProposed mechanisms

Traction on pain sensitive intracranial structures– 150ml CSF: 75ml spinally / 75ml supra –– Volunteers: removal of 10% of CSF = headache

Cerebral venous dilatation– “compensatory” intracranial hyperaemia– More evidence than first mechanism

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PDPHGreatest influence on the incidence

1. Techniquea. Direction of bevel (Quincke type needle)

Parallel with longitudinal fibers of dura2. Choice of needle

a. Size (smaller is safer)Not larger than 26G

b. DesignPencil-point tip, i.e. not to cut fibers

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PDPH - management

Conservative measures– Bed rest– Analgesics– Hydration (caffeine)

Epidural salineEpidural blood patch (EBP)

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SUMMARYRole of anesthetist during C/S

Attending primarily to the mother, and by doing so, assuring the best

possible outcome for the baby

- in a cramped space shared by at least seven demanding people -

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SUMMARYREALISE AND RECOGNISE ALTERED– PHYSIOLOGY– ANATOMY– PHARMACOLOGY

COMMUNICATE WITH OBSTETRICIAN

CAN BE REWARDING!

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THANK YOU!