Title: Anesthetic Management of the Patient with Preeclampsia
1Anesthetic Management of the Patient with
Preeclampsia
- Dmitry Portnoy, MD
- Anesthesiology Department
2MATERNAL MORTALITY IN PREGNANCY IN THE UNITED
STATES, 1980-1985
Adapted from the US Maternal mortality
Surveillance, 1980-1985. MMWR CDC Surveillance
Summary, 1988.
3Classification of Hypertensive Disease in
Pregnancy(Australian Society for the Study of
Hypertension in Pregnancy, 1999)
4Risk Factors and Mechanisms of Preeclampsia
- Risk of preeclampsia up to 8 of all
pregnancies - Factors implicated in increased risk of
developing preeclampsia - Genetic determination, familial history
- Chronic HTN, DM, chronic renal disease, LSE,
sickle cell - Twin gestation, nulliparity, maternal age over
40, adolescents - Pathogenesis of preeclampsia is poorly understood
- multisystem abnormalities - only in the presence
of placental tissue - generalized endothelial cell disorder
- excessive immunologic reaction
- Triad of physiological derangements
- Intense vasospasm
endothelium, platelets, trophoblasts - Local or disseminated intravascular coagulation
- Plasma volume contraction
disruption
5FACTORS THAT DIFFERENTIATE MILD FROM SEVERE
PREECLAMPSIA
6Severe Preeclampsia Diagnostic Criteria
- Two or more of the following signs
- Systolic blood pressure of 160 mmHg or diastolic
pressure of 110 mmHg recorded six hours apart
with the patient at bed rest - Proteinuria, 5g/24 hours or 3 to 4 protein on
dipstick - Oliguria, urine output less than 400 mL/24 hours,
or less than 30 mL/hour for two consecutive hours - Cerebral or visual disturbances, including eye
changes - Pulmonary edema
- Epigastric pain
- Evidence of hemolysis, abnormal results from
liver function tests, and/or thrombocytopenia - Generalized convulsions and no history of seizure
disorder
Adapted from Stone JL, et al. Risk factors for
severe preeclampsia. Obstet Gynecol
199483357-361
7Organ System Derangements in Eclampsia
8Principles of Treatment of Preeclampsia
- Delivery - definitive treatment (except for
atypical) - Antihypertensive drug therapy
- Bed rest, non-stimulating environment
- Aspirin, Calcium supplementation, volume expansion
9(No Transcript)
10Magnesium Sulfate Therapy
- Potentiation of neuromuscular blockade (for all
relaxants) - Weakness
- Respiratory depression
- Cardiovascular effects
- ECG changes
- Cardiac arrest
- Hypotension
- Decreased uterine tone
- Excessive blood loss
- Neonatal effects
- Magnesium Toxicity
- Â
- Loss of patellar reflex 812 mg/dl
- Warmth, flushing 912 mg/dl
- Somnolence 1012 mg/dl
- Slurred speech 1012 mg/dl
- Muscular paralysis 1517 mg/dl
- Respiratory difficulty 1517 mg/dl
- Cardiac arrest 3035 mg/dl
- Theraputic range 4-8 mg/dl
11INDICATIONS FOR DELIVERY OF THE FETUS IN SEVERE
PREECLAMPSIA
Modified from Gallery EDM Hypertension in
pregnancy. Practical management recommendations.
Drugs 1995494561.
12Pre-anesthetic Evaluation
- Assessment of target organ-system involvement
- CV HTN control, LV function, intravascular
depletion - Renal degree of oliguria, creatinine level
- Liver LFTs, signs of liver capsule streching
- Coagulation profile platelet count, PT, PTT
- Airway examination degree of laryngeal edema
- Anesthetic risk factors
- Poorly controlled hypertension
- gt2 urinary protein, elevated serum uric acid
- Thrombocytopenia less than 75,000
- Central vascular volume depletion
- Association with chronic HTN and IDDM
13Invasive Monitoring
- Arterial catheter
- Sustained diastolic blood pressure greater than
90 mm Hg - Use of parenteral vasodilaters (NTP, NTG)
- Induction of anesthesia with potential rapid BP
fluctuations - Inability to obtain accurate BP by cuff
- Need for frequent sampling
- Pulmonary artery catheter
- Severe HTN unresponsive to conventional treatment
- Severe pulmonary edema
- Persistent oliguria unresponsive to fluid
challenge
14Regional Anesthesia for Preeclamptic Patient
- Advantages of epidural anesthesia
- Blunts hormonal and hemodynamic responses
- Provides better hemodynamic stability
- Increases renal and uteroplacental blood flow
- Decrease potential for seizures
- Spinal anesthesia
- Growing evidence of safety in preeclampsia
- Less hemodynamic stability (?)
- Less potential for hematoma
- Combined spinal-epidural
15Thrombocytopenia and Epidural Block
?
- Safe lower limit for platelet count before
epidural - Retrospective analysis of 2929 parturients
(Rasmus, 1989) - 14 with platelet count 18,000 90,000 received
neuraxial block - None had sequelae of spinal hematoma
- No spinal/epidural hematomas in parturients
reported - Low-dose aspirin and neuraxial block apparently
safe - Bleeding time questionable indicator of risk of
RA - Recommendations
- Patient history, signs of bleeding, test tube
clot formation, ACT - Modification of technique that decreased the risk
of bleeding
16General Anesthesia for Preeclamptic Patient
- Airway edema
- Attention to hoarseness, high pitched or
stridorous voice - Small ETT (5-6 mm)
- Hypertensive response
- Induction, intubation and extubation
- HTN and tachycardia can lead to increased ICP
- Interaction of anesthetic agents with magnesium
sulfate
17HELLP Syndrome
- H
- E
- L
- L
- P
- Occurs in 4-12 of severe PIH patients
- Reported perinatal mortality 7.7- 60
- Maternal mortality 3.5- 24.2.
emolisis
elevated
iver
ow
latelets
18Eclampsia
- From Gr., a fancied perception of flashes of
light - Occurrence of a seizure that is not attributable
to other causes in a preeclamptic patient - Steps in managing an eclamptic convulsion
- Maintain adequate oxygenation
- Prevent maternal injury during the convulsion
- Minimize the risk of aspiration
- Give adequate magnesium sulfate to control the
convulsions - Maternal acidemia should be corrected
- Do not attempt to shorten or abolish the initial
convulsion - Avoid polypharmacy
19Conclusion
- Preeclampsia is fairly common multisystem
disorder - Associated with high maternal and perinatal MM.
(Mortality in obstetric patient can be 200!) - Important steps in anesthesia management
- Close communication with obstetrical colleagues
- Early and detailed preoperative assessment and
plan - Meticulous monitoring, including invasive
monitors if indicated - Utilization of advantages of RA when appropriate
- Close postoperative follow-up