Title: Physiological changes during pregnancy and uteroplacental circulation.
1Physiological changes during pregnancy and
uteroplacental circulation.
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- Presenter Dr. Anamika Sharma
- Moderator Dr. Rachna Wadhwa
University College of Medical Sciences GTB
Hospital, Delhi
2Contents
- Body weight and composition during pregnancy.
- Phases of pregnancy and labor.
- Anatomical changes in the pregnancy.
- System wise changes in the physiology during the
pregnancy. - Uteroplacental circulation and the factors
affecting.
3Anatomical changes in pregnancy
- Uterus an intrapelvic organ till 12 weeks of
gestation. - By 20 weeks- uterus reaches upto umbilicus.
- By 34 weeks it reaches the costal margin.
- Last 2 weeks fundal height decreases when fetal
head descends in the pelvis. - Increased lumbar lordosis.
4Pregnancy and labor
- 1st TM 1st 12 weeks
- 2nd TM 13-28 weeks
- 3rd TM 29-40 weeks.
- Stages of labor
- Stage 1a) dilatation and the effacement of the
cervix. b) formation of the lower uterine
segment. - Stage 2 Complete dilatation of the cervix to
the expulsion of the fetus. - Stage 3 Phase of placental separation.
5BODY WEIGHT AND COMPOSITION
- Maternal weight gain-12kgs.
- Increased size of uterus(1kg)
- Amniotic fluid(1kg)
- Fetus and placenta(4kgs)
- Blood volume and interstitial fluid(4kgs)
- New fat and protein (2-4kgs)
- First trimester - 1-2 kgs
- Second trimester - 5-6 kgs
- Third trimester - 5-6 kgs
6Factors causing physiological changes in
pregnancy
- Hormonal alterations
- Mechanical effects of the gravid uterus.
- Increased metabolic and oxygen requirements.
- Metabolic demands of the fetoplacental unit.
- Hemodynamic alterations a/w placental circulation.
7Respiratory Changes during pregnancy
- AIRWAY
- Capillary engorgement of the mucosa - changes in
the Mallampatti examination score. - Exaggerated by mild URI, fluid overload or the
edema associated with PIH. - Intranasal manipulation can cause brisk
epistaxis. - Breast engorgement can interfere with
laryngoscopy.
8Changes in the respiratory system at term
Variable Direction of change Magnitude
Minute ventilation(MV) ? 50
Alveolar ventilation ? 70
Tidal volume ? 40
Arterial PaO2 ? 10mm Hg(85-103mm)
Oxygen Consumption ? 20
Respiratory rate ? 15
Inspiratory lung capacity ? 5-15
Arterial pH ? 7.40-7.47
Vital capacity ?
Arterial PaCO2 ? 27-33.5 mm Hg
Serum bicarbonate ? 21-27 mEq/L
FRC ? -15-20
Expiratory reserve volume ? -20
Residual volume ? -20
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10-
- During labor ? MV - ?300 ?development of
maternal hypocarbia( PaCO2 20mm Hg) and
alkalemia(pHgt7.53) ?left shift of ODC ? loss of
consciousness ?hypoventilation. - Obesity -?? vital capacity.
- Supine position--susceptibility to atelectasis
and ? A-a gradient. - Closing capacity may exceed FRC.
- Oxygen consumption -- ? 63.
11- Anaesthetic implications respiratory function
changes - rapidity of induction of inhaled anaesthetics-
(?FRC and ?MV). - MAC of the potent anaesthetic agents ? by
24-40(?sensitivity to inhalational anaesthetic
agents). - Judicious dosing of the inhaled anaesthetics
required ?loss of protective airway reflexes and
cardiopulmonary depression at ? doses. - Susceptibility to hypoxia ?, use of ? FiO2.
12Role of maternal preoxygenation
- Hypoxemia develops rapidly
- d/t ?FRC
- ? O2 consumption.
- FRC lt Closing capacity in supine position.
- During apneic periods rate of PaO2 fall, more
than twice in parturient. - After complete denitrogenation
- apneic period is 6-8 min. in non pregnant
- 2-3 min. in pregnancy.
13Anaesthetic implications
PARAMETER CONSEQUENCE
1. MV ? Faster denitrogenation
2. ?FRC ?O2 consumption Rapid hypoxia during apnoea
3. ?MV ?FRC Faster inhalational induction Faster emergence Faster changes in depth
4. Mucosal engorgement Difficult airway
5. Predominant diaphragmatic breathing High spinal does not affect MV PaCO2 much
14Hematological changes
- Plasma volume -? 40mL/kg - 70mL/kg(45)
- RBC volume -? 25ml/kg - 30ml/kg(30)?
Physiological anemia of pregnancy. - Leukocyte levels- ?12000-21000/mL.
- Platelet count- ?/?20 but no alteration in BT.
- Clotting factors hypercoagulable state, general
? in all the clotting factors.
15- Fibrinogen ?? to 400-650mg/dL(normal-200-450mg/dL)
? ?ESR value - Factors VII, VIII and X ?? after the 3rd month of
pregnancy. - Factors II, V and XII ?
- Factors XI and XIII- slightly ?.
- Clotting factors return to normal within 2 weeks.
- .
16CVSHemodyanamics in pregnancy.
CO Starts to increase by 5 wks.
CO End of the 1st TM 30-40
CO end of the 2nd TM 50
2ND Stage of labor 40
With each uterine contraction 15-20
Immediately post partum 75-80 above prelabor values.
Returns to pre pregnant levels by 2 weeks post partum.
17CVS Hemodynamicscont.
SV 20-50
Contractility 10
Systemic vascular resistance -20
Pulmonary vascular resistance -30
18CVS-Examination
- Innocent grade I/II systolic heart murmur.
- Doppler and echo studies- ?end diastolic chamber
size ? in total LV wall thickness, asymptomatic
pericardial effusion, trivial MR and TR. - Diaphragmatic rise shifts the position of the
heart leftwards, enlarged appearance on CXR. - ECG shows increase in benign dysrhythmias,
reversible ST, T and Q wave changes and some LAD.
19- The findings indicating heart disease
- overtly symptomatic patient
- systolic murmurgtgrade III
- any diastolic murmur
- severe arrythmias
- unequivocal cardiac enlargement on chest X
ray.
20- Maternal BV markedly ?during pregnancy.
- Immediate post-partum-- 35-40 ?in BV, due to
auto transfusion of 300-500 ml blood. - Healthy parturient - tolerate up to 1500 mL of
blood loss. - Women with cardiac and pulmonary disease remain
at risk after the delivery due to ?CO. - Epidural block beneficial -cardiac diseases.
- Normal nonpregnant blood volume is reached by
7-14 days post partum.
21CVSMeasurement of BP.
- Auscultatory better than oscillometric.
- Diastolic BP represents Phase V(disappearance)
Korotkoffs not Phase IV(muffling). - Position Dependent left arm in the left
decubitus . - SV(?)
- SBP
?SBP unaffected - vsl distensibility(?complianc
e) - BP
- DBP SVR(?)
DBP ?
22- Despite ?CO, BP remains static during pregnancy
because of 21 and 34 ? in systemic and
pulmonary vascular resistance and an ? aortic
compliance. - Oxytocin with a free water infusion can cause
volume overload. - High Hb. level(gt14gm) indicates a low volume
state caused by preeclampsia, HT or inappropriate
diuretics
23- AORTOCAVAL COMPRESSION
- 15 pregnant patients near term develop signs of
shock, hypotension, pallor, sweating, nausea,
vomiting when they assume supine position. - This syndrome was described by Howard et al as
supine hypotension syndrome now known as
aortocaval compression syndrome. - Symptoms are because of the lack of the venous
return to the heart. - Compression of the IVC is most common in the late
pregnancy.
24Compression of aorta IVC in supine lateral
tilt position
25- Pooling of the venous blood and ?venous pressure
in the lower torso and lower extremities cause ? - tendency towards phlebitis and venous
varicosities. - Blood from the obstructed IVC ?
paravertebral(epidural) veins ? azygos system.
Venodilatation ? accidental epidural vein
puncture. - Prevention Left uterine displacement(LUD).
- Left tilt of the table by 15 degrees or wedge or
bag to elevate the right buttock and back by
10-15 cms. - Avoid trendlenburg position without LUD.
26NERVOUS SYSTEM CHANGES
- ?MAC near term.
- MAC returns to normal values within 3-5 days
after delivery. - ?maternal beta- endorphins.
- Increased intra abdominal pressure ? Engorgement
of epidural veins? ? spinal CSF volume
accidental intravascular injection in epidural or
caudal block. - ? lumbar lordosis.
- Apex of thoracic kyphosis at a higher level.
27- 30 reduction in the LA requirements for SAB.
- Swelling of the epidural veins ??CSF
volume. - Labor? ?CSF pressure.
- ?neurosensitivity to LA.
- ? cephalad spread caused by widening of the
pelvis when the injections are made in the
patients in the lateral position.
28Pelvic widening resultant head down tilt
29GIT Changes
- LES tone? d/t upward gastric displacement by the
gravid uterus, muscle relaxation by the
progestins. - Gastric emptying may be prolonged during
pregnancy but certainly during labor(? by opiates
and anticholinergics). - Gastrin secreted from placenta??acid, chloride
content, volume and enzyme levels of the stomach. - Increased chances of aspiration d/t ? LES tone,
nausea, obesity, drugs, ketosis, recent food
ingestion.
30Gastrointestinal system
Anatomical 1. ?Angle of GE junction 2. Cephalad
displacement of stomach intestine 3.
Vertical rather than horizontal stomach
Physiological 1. Relaxed LES (progesterone)
?barrier P. 2. Delayed gastric emptying
(narcotics, anticholinergics, pain of
labour)
31- At risk for Mendelsons syndrome due to acid
material. - Solid material a/w atelectasis, lung abscess and
mechanical obstruction.
32Anaesthetic implications
- Risk of aspiration pneumonitis
- Ph lt 2.5 (nearly all)
- Gastric vol gt 25 ml ( 60)
- ? LES tone ? intragastric P ? gastric
emptying - Recent food intake prior to labour/ surgery
1. Consider gravida as FULL STOMACH beyond 1st trimester
2. Give aspiration prophylaxis
3. Regional anaesthesia / inhalational analgesia preferred
4. Plan RSI
33RENAL CHANGES
- ?RPF- 40-90
- ?GFR- 50-60 by 4th month of gestation and
return to normal by 3rd TM. - ?RPF and GFR ??creatinine clearance, ?upper limit
of normal BUN and creatinine by 40. - Normal pregnancy- BUN- 6-9mg/dl and
creatinine-0.4-0.6 mg/dl. - ? RAAS activity??total body sodium and water.
- Threshold for ADH secretion reset??plasma
osmolality
34- ?angiotensin but ?sensitivity
- Glucosuria of 1-10 gms and proteinuria of 300
mg/day common. - Renal calyces, pelvis and ureters dilate after
3rd month of gestation progesterone and
compression of ureters at the pelvic brim. - Urinary stasis?frequent UTIs
35Hepatic and Endocrine
- ?SGOT, LDH, ALP, GGT and cholesterol levels.
- Abnormal bromsulphthalein excretion test.
- Serum bil.- unaltered.
- Total protein and AG ratio-?, ?ser. albumin.
- Unbound plasma cortisol-2.5X
- Serum cholinesterase activity-?24 before
delivery and by 33 at 3 days post partum, normal
by 2-6 weeks post partum.
36- ?bound T3 and T4 by 50, free hormones are normal
- ? Calcium dependent nitric oxide synthase
activity. - ?ANP
- ?insulin sensitivity in the last half of
pregnancy d/t placental insulinase production. - ?resting blood glucose levels and ?post prandial
blood glucose levels.
37Endocrine
ensure continuous
glucose supply to foetus
GLUCOSE METABOLISM
4
Estrogen, progesterone Hpl, prolactin,
contrainsulin factors cortisol,
FFA
hyperinsulinemia (resistance)
lipogenesis, hyperlipidemia, hyperketonemia
Fasting hypoglycemia (foetal consumption) PP
hyperglycemia hyperinsulinemia
38Uteroplacental circulationPlacental anatomy.
- Placenta - villous haemochorial type.
- At term wt- 500 gm, diameter 20cms, 3 cm thick.
Normal fetal to placental weight ratio 61 - Fetal maternal blood is separated by 3
structures - cytotrophoblast.
- syncytiotrophoblast(metabolically active), has
got endocrine function. - connective tissue.
39- The placenta - consist of a basal and a chorionic
plate. - a semipermeable membrane -interface for the
maternal and fetal circulation. - The intervillous space separates the plates and
is subdivided by decidual tissue. - Chorionic villi and spiral arteries protrude into
this intervillous space. - Maternal blood flows into the intervillous
space(80) from the spiral artery.
40Placental Anatomy cont.
41Mechanisms of exchange.
- Substances are exchanged across the placenta by 5
mechanism - Diffusion ( FA.CO2.respiratory gases,Na)
- Active transport.(AA.Ca,Fe,water sol vitamin) a.
Primary active transport. b. Secondary active
transport. - Bulk flow.
- Pinocytosis ( Fe).
- Breaks
42Uterine Blood Flow
- ? throughout the pregnancy, at term700ml/min10
of the CO - Blood flow? and resistance ?
- Maximally dilated under normal conditions, no
autoregulation, capable of VC by alpha adrenergic
action, unresponsive to ? gas tensions. - Flow proportional to mean perfusion pressure.
43Factors causing decreased uterine blood flow
- Uterine contractions
- Hypertonus abruptio placentae, tetanic
contractions, overstimulation with oxytocin. - Hypotension sympathectomy, hypovolemic shock,
aortocaval compression. - Hypertension essential, pre-eclamptic.
- Vasoconstriction endogenous sympathetic
discharge, adrenal medullary activity. - Vasoconstrictors exogenous most
sympathomimetics, exception is ephedrine(B
adrenergic)
44Summary
- CO increases during pregnancy as a result of ?SV
and HR. - Pregnant women should not lie supine after 20
weeks of gestation to prevent aortocaval
compression. - Increased blood volume of pregnancy allows the
parturient to tolerate blood loss of delivery
with minimal hemodynamic perturbation. - Oxygen demand and delivery both are increased.
45- Higher sympathetic tone in pregnancy.
- Pre-oxygenation mandatory.
- Increased risk of failed intubation.
- Sensitivity to inhaled anesthetics and local
anesthetics-?. - Analgesia for labor requires epidural block-
- T10-L1- 1st stage of labor.
- T12-S4- 2nd stage of labor.
46References
- Obstetric anaesthesia principles and practice-
David H Chestnut - Obstetric anaesthesia- Schneider, 2nd edition.
- Anaesthesia Co-existing diseases-Stoelting
- Millers anaesthesia- 7th edition.
- Clinical anesthesiology by Morgan et al - 4th
edition - Textbook of obstetrics- DC Dutta
47Thank You
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