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The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia
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The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Dec 15, 2015

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Page 1: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

The pregnant trauma patient

Tom Archer MD, MBA

UCSD Anesthesia

Page 2: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Outline

• Epidemiology• General approach to the patient• Anesthesia and diagnostic studies.• Obstetric complications of trauma

– (What the obstetrician will be thinking about)

• Relevant maternal / fetal physiology• FHR monitoring• Perimortem cesarean section

Page 3: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Trauma in pregnancy

• Trauma is most common non-obstetric cause of maternal death.

• Common major traumas: MVAs, falls and assaults.

• 5-10% of pregnancies are marred by some sort of trauma (usually very minor and not seen in hospital).

• In one study, 0.2% of all pregnant women were seen in hospital for trauma during a given pregnancy.

Chestnut chap 53, El Kady D et al 2004

Page 4: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Trauma in pregnancy

• Incidence of trauma increases as pregnancy progresses:

– 8% in first trimester– 40% in second trimester– 52% in third trimester

Page 5: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Causes of maternal death

• Most maternal deaths are due to head trauma or hemorrhagic shock.

Page 6: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Commonest causes of fetal death

• In severe maternal injury, it is maternal death.

• In “minor” injury, it is placental abruption

Page 7: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

http://www.maternity-seatbelt.jp/Seat_belt_photo.gif

Pregnant women need to wear seat belts properly:

One strap under uterus, the other between breasts.

Many women don’t wear them for fear of hurting the baby.

Improper placement can injure fetus.

Page 8: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Domestic violence

• Domestic violence knows no boundaries of race or economic status.

• Pregnancy often represents dependency and loss of autonomy and control.

• Abusers will take advantage of this. They may feel threatened by pregnancy and attack abdomen as a way of retaliating against fetus.

Page 9: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Domestic violence

• Think of it as a possibility!

• Look for emotional withdrawal, depression, self-blame.

• Look for other (older) signs of injury.

• Face-to-face, one-on-one interviews. Calm, matter-of-fact tone helps elicit Hx.

Page 10: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

“What will happen to my baby?”

• “Trauma appears to affect the fetus only in the short-term…”

• “…if there is no early placental abruption, fetal death, premature rupture of membranes, or urgent delivery, there is no significant difference in pregnancy outcome…”

•Shah KH 1998

Page 11: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Trauma management in pregnancy

• Best way to take care of baby is to take care of mother. All ACLS guidelines apply.

• Know how physiological / anatomical changes of pregnancy affect vulnerability of patient to stresses.

• Plan for specific obstetric concerns (without getting obsessed).

• Common worries (patient, nurse, MD) : radiation, drugs, abruption, anesthesia.

Page 12: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Anesthesia in OB trauma

• Maintain good anesthesia, oxygenation, normotension, normothermia, normocarbia (PaCO2 = 30) and LUD. Avoid ketamine > 2 mg /kg (uterine hypertonus).

• Monitor FHTs if practical. Loss of variability is normal, but fetal tachy- or bradycardia may mean hypoxia.

• Defensive medicine: probably avoid benzodiazepines and N2O early in gestation (little to no solid evidence for this).

Page 13: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

X-ray studies in pregnant patients

• Use x-ray studies judiciously– but USE THEM when needed!

• Shield uterus when possible.

• Consult with radiologist on minimizing exposure.

Page 14: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

X-ray doses from studies

1 Rad = 10 mGy (“milliGrey”)

Mann FA et al 2000

Page 15: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Risk from X-ray exposure1 Rad = 10 mGy (“milliGrey”)

Benefit of judiciously chosen x-rays far outweighs risks in pregnant trauma patients.

Intermediate exposure (50-100 mGy) roughly equivalent to 3 years of natural background radiation exposure and is associated with no increase in anomalies or growth restriction.

Mann FA et al 2000

Page 16: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

X-ray studies in pregnant patients

• CT is gold standard for Dx of blunt abdominal trauma.

• Transport from ER to CT scanner and radiation risks / fears remain as obstacles to CT.

Miller MT 2003

Page 17: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Astarita DC et al 1997

MVA, pregnant patient at 27 weeks EGA, lap belt worn across the bulge.

CT scan: ruptured uterus with extruded products of conception.

Page 18: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Astarita DC et al 1997

MVA, pregnant patient at 27 weeks EGA, lap belt worn across the bulge.

CT scan: ruptured uterus with extruded products of conception.

Page 19: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Ultrasound in trauma evaluation

• Can ultrasound substitute for CT? Modality is called FAST (“Focused Abdominal Sonography for Trauma”).

• Focus of FAST is detecting free fluid, presumed to be blood.

• FAST is part of screening process, but can miss injuries (e.g. solid organ).

Miller MT 2003

Page 20: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Richards JR 2004

Lateral pelvic ultrasound: free fluid in cul-de-sac (+ Foley in bladder).

Page 21: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Obstetric complications of trauma

• Abruption

Pre-term labor• Ruptured membranes• Uterine rupture• Direct fetal injury (usually penetrating trauma)

• Rare: amniotic fluid embolus, chorionic villus embolus

Kingston NJ 2003Judich A 1998

Page 22: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Predisposing factors to DIC / ARDS after trauma in pregnancy:

• Abruption.• Dead fetus.• Shock• Sepsis• Traumatic amniotic fluid embolus (rare).

– Factors in common are release of abnormal substances into circulation.

• Hypothermia and acidosis exacerbate coagulopathy.

Ferrara A 1990

Page 23: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

)

Umbilical artery (UA)Umbilical vein (UV)

Uterine arteriesUterine veinsMom

Fetus

Normal placental function: fetal and maternal circulations separated by thin membrane (syncytiotrophoblast).

Diffusion of O2 and CO2 is +/- complete.

Fetal O2 uptake limited by uterine blood flow.

“Lakes” of maternal blood

Archer TL 2006 unpublished

Fetal capillaries in chorionic villi

Page 24: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

www.siumed.edu/~dking2/erg/images/placenta.jpgfrom Google images

Page 25: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

)

Umbilical artery (UA)Umbilical vein (UV)

Uterine arteriesUterine veins

Placental abruption: fetal asphyxiation (O2 supply is cut off).

Abruption

Archer TL 2006 unpublished

Page 26: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Placental abruption

Elastic myometrium

Liquid placenta

Placenta shears off

Page 27: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Abruption separates here

www.simba.rdg.ac.uk

From Google images

Page 28: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Pearlman MD 1997

Usually happens within 4-6 hours (if it’s going to happen).

Incidence of abruption from minor trauma is low (1.6%), but…

Minor trauma is common, so minor trauma causes many abruptions.

Major trauma is uncommon, but incidence of abruption is high (37.5%).

Placental abruption from “minor” trauma

Page 29: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Miller’s Anesthesia chap. 58

Page 30: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Placental abruption

• Accompanies 1-5% of minor injuries, 20-50% of major injuries.

• Abdominal tenderness

• Uterine tenderness

• Uterine contractions

• Vaginal bleeding– but hemorrhage may be hidden.

Page 31: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Placental trauma (+/- abruption):Feto-maternal hemorrhage

• More common with anterior placenta? (Pearlman 1990)

• Chorionic villi break, releasing fetal RBCs into lakes of maternal blood.

• Dangers: – Iso-immunization of Rh- mother by Rh+ fetal cells.– Fetal exsanguination / anemia / hydrops / brain damage.– Premature labor (due to release of thrombin, lysozymes or

prostaglandins into maternal circulation?).

Page 32: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

)

Umbilical artery (UA)Umbilical vein (UV)

Uterine arteriesUterine veins

Placental disruption: feto-maternal hemorrhage

Chorionic villus disruption

Archer TL 2006 unpublished

Page 33: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

www.siumed.edu/~dking2/erg/images/placenta.jpgfrom Google images

Page 34: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Chorionic villus disruption causing feto-maternal hemorrhage

www.simba.rdg.ac.uk From Google images

Page 35: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Kleihauer- Betke preparation

• Maternal blood smear eluted with acid wash.

• Adult hemoglobin washed away

• Fetal hemoglobin stays behind– a few brightly stained fetal cells amongst a sea of ‘”ghostly” maternal cells.

Page 36: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

www.cbbsweb.org from Google images

Kleihauer-Betke preparation: Massive fetal-maternal hemorrhage

Page 37: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

KB prep to diagnoseFeto-maternal hemorrhage

• One dose of RhoGam (anti-D antibody to destroy fetal Rh+ RBCs) is routine with trauma to Rh- mother (regardless of KB results).

• Kleihauer – Betke prep sometimes used to assess:– Need for repeated RhoGam doses (large FMH)– Probability of pre-term labor (?)

Page 38: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Does feto-maternal hemorrhage promote pre-term labor?

Page 39: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Muench MV et al 2004

Theory: Kleihauer -Betke test predicts uterine contractions and preterm labor

Page 40: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Fetal heart rate monitoring (for hypoxia) after trauma

• Worry is abruption.• Usually combined with contraction monitoring. • 4 hours is routine.• >4 hours if:

– Abruption suspected– Frequent uterine activity– Rupture of membranes– FHR abnormalities present– Mother is in critical condition

Chestnut chap 53

Page 41: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Ruptured uterus

• Life-threatening emergency, 10% maternal mortality

• Fetus almost always dies.

Page 42: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Ruptured amniotic membranes

• Vaginal fluid leak– avenue for infection.

• By itself, not an emergency.

Page 43: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Maternal / fetal physiology and anatomy relevant to trauma

Page 44: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Feto-placental unit

12 ml O2 / kg / min

Mom

4 ml O2 / kg / min

Mother is consuming and delivering

oxygen for two!

www.studentlife.villanova.edu

Page 45: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Physiological changes of pregnancy at term:

• Maternal-fetal O2 consumption increases 40-50% over non-pregnant state.

• Cardiac output increases by 50%.

• Functional residual capacity (apneic reserve of O2) decreases by 20%

Pregnant patient has diminished capacity to tolerate apnea!

Chestnut chap. 53

Page 46: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Functional residual capacity (FRC) is our “air tank” for apnea.

www.picture-newsletter.com/scuba-diving/scuba... from Google images

Page 48: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

At term, mother has respiratory alkalosis with metabolic compensation (less HCO3- buffer).

ABGs Non-pregnant

At term

PaCO2 40 30

PaO2 100 103

pH 7.40 7.44

HCO3- 24 20

Chestnut

Page 49: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

At term, mother also has lower hemoglobin concentration to buffer

acid load:

Non-pregnant At term

Hemoglobin 12-14 gm / dL 11-12 gm / dL

Page 50: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Compared to non-pregnant state, pregnant woman has less tolerance for:

• Apnea

• Acidosis

Page 51: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Hematologic changes at term:

Blood volume increased by 45%

Pregnant woman may tolerate hemorrhage better than non-pregnant woman, before showing fall in BP.

Fibrinogen increased.PT, PTT shortened 20%.Increased platelet turnover.

Increase in coagulation factors,immobilization and aorto-caval compression all increase risk of DVT.

Page 52: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Vascular congestion

• Swelling of respiratory mucosa (nose, rest of airway).

• Don’t put anything through the nose if you can avoid it prevent bad nose bleed.

Page 53: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

GI tract

• Decreased gastric emptying

• Increase GERD

• Full stomach precautions

Page 54: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Avoid aorto-caval compression: useleft uterine displacement (LUD)

• LUD helps venous return. C/S as part of resuscitation?

• LUD decreases chance of DVT

• LUD increases O2 delivery to fetus:– Increases uterine artery pressure and decreases

uterine venous pressure.

•Why we don’t do it: It doesn’t look right!

Page 55: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

)

Umbilical artery (UA)300 ml / minUmbilical vein (UV)

Uterine artery

700 ml / minUterine vein

Mom

Fetus

Normal placental function: fetal and maternal circulations separated by thin membrane.

Diffusion of O2 and CO2 is +/- complete. Umbilical vessels have no tone.

Fetal O2 uptake limited by uterine blood flow.

pH = 7.33

pO2 = 15

pCO2 = 44

pH = 7.37

pO2 = 28

pCO2 = 35

pH = 7.45

pO2 = 96

pCO2 = 28

pH = 7.35

pO2 = 33

pCO2 = 37

Data from Chestnut chap.4

Page 56: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

P1 = uterine artery pressure

P2 = uterine vein pressure

R = placental resistance (fixed in short term)

Ohm’s Law of the placenta: O2 delivery = Placental blood flow = (P1 – P2) / R

Aorto-caval compression decreases P1 (“aorto”) and increases P2 (“caval”)

Therefore, aorto-caval compression decreases O2 delivery to fetus.

Placenta blood flow (O2 delivery) =

(P1 – P2) / R

Archer TL 2006

Page 57: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Colman-Brochu S 2004

Page 58: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

http://www.manbit.com/OA/f28-1.htm

Page 59: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Manbit imageshttp://www.manbit.com/OA/f28-1.htm

Page 60: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Chestnut chap. 2

Page 61: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

What happens if fetus doesn’t get enough oxygen? (What is the mammalian diving response?)

www.doc.govt.nz/.../images/diving-whale-tail.jpg

Page 62: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

http://www.aafp.org/afp/990501ap/2487.html

FIGURE 6. Nonreassuring pattern of late decelerations with preserved beat-to-beat variability. Note the onset at the peak of the uterine contractions and the return to baseline after the contraction has ended. The second uterine contraction is associated with a shallow and subtle late deceleration.

Page 63: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Humans have diving responses too!

Univ of Lund Thesis Johan Andersson http://www.biol.lu.se/zoofysiol/Johan/Avhandling.html#Sv

Page 64: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Univ of Lund Thesis Johan Andersson http://www.biol.lu.se/zoofysiol/Johan/Avhandling.html#Sv

The human diving response. The changes in mean arterial blood pressure (MAP), heart rate (HR) and skin capillary blood flow (SkBF) during apnea with face immersions are shown. The heart rate and skin capillary blood flow are reduced while the MAP increases during apnea.

Page 65: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

The mammalian diving reflex shuts down blood flow to all organs except the heart and brain, in order to conserve oxygen.

The fetus’ response to hypoxia is related to this reflex.

See Univ of lund thesis Johan Andersson http://www.biol.lu.se/zoofysiol/Johan/Avhandling.html#Sv

Page 66: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Chestnut chap. 53

Perimortem cesarean section – 5 minute rule

Page 67: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Summary

• MVAs, falls and assaults are the commonest traumatic mechanisms in pregnancy.

• Think of the possibility of domestic violence / partner abuse.

• Pregnant women need to wear seat belts properly.

Page 68: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Summary

• Don’t over-react to the fact that patient is pregnant.

• ACLS and all usual diagnostic studies should be performed. Ultrasound may be useful, but perform needed x-ray studies!

• Management of pregnancy is part of secondary survey.

Page 69: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Summary

• Abruption is commonest cause of fetal death in non-life-threatening trauma to mother.

• Abruption most likely with abdominal trauma.

• Abdominal trauma can also cause feto-maternal hemorrhage, uterine rupture, rupture of membranes and pre-term labor.

Page 70: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Summary

• Feto-maternal hemorrhage may be a cause of pre-term labor.

• KB prep may have value in screening for severe feto-maternal hemorrhage and risk of pre-term labor.

• One dose of RhoGam is routine in trauma to Rh- mother, regardless of KB results.

Page 71: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Summary

• Pregnant women are vulnerable to apnea and have swollen airways.

• They may be tolerant of blood loss, with delayed fall in BP.

• LUD is important for 3 reasons:– Maternal hemodynamics– Fetal oxygenation– DVT prophylaxis

Page 72: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Summary

• Fetal oxygen uptake is proportional to placental blood flow.

• The fetus will drop heart rate in response to hypoxia. This is the basis for FHR monitoring after maternal trauma.

• This response is related to the “mammalian diving reflex.”

Page 73: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Summary

• To deliver an intact newborn, perimortem cesarean section should deliver baby within 5 minutes of cessation of maternal circulation and oxygenation.

Page 74: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

My Website

• You can download this talk from:

• www.archeranesthesia.info

Page 75: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

Thank you!

The End

Page 76: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

References

• Astarita: J Trauma, Volume 42(4).April 1997.738-740

• Chestnut DH, Obstetric Anesthesia, Principles and Practice, third edition.

• Colman-Brochu S American Journal of Maternal Child Nursing. 29(3):186-92, 2004 May-Jun.

• El Kady D et al American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology (2004) 190, 1661e8

• Elovitz MA American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology. 185(5):1059-63, 2001 Nov.

• Ferrara A American Journal of Surgery. 160(5):515-8, 1990 Nov.

• Judich A Injury, Vol. 29, No. 6, 475-477, 1998.

• Kingston NJ Am J Forensic Med Pathol 2003;24: 193–197

Page 77: The pregnant trauma patient Tom Archer MD, MBA UCSD Anesthesia.

References

Mann FA et al The Journal of Trauma (2000) Vol. 48, No. 2, pp.354-357

Miller MT Journal of Trauma Volume 54(1), January 2003, pp 52-60

Muench MV J Trauma. 2004;57:1094–1098.

Pearlman MD et al American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology. 162(6):1502-7; discussion 1507-10, 1990 Jun.

Pearlman MD International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics 57 (1997) 127-132

Richards JR Radiology 2004; 233:463–470

Shah KH J Trauma Volume 45(1), July 1998, pp 83-86

Warner MW ANZ J. Surg.2004;74: 125–128