Title: General Anesthesia for Cesarean Section
1General Anesthesia for Cesarean Section
- Husong Li, M.D., Ph.D.
- Assistant Professor
- Department of Anesthesiology
- University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston,
Texas
2Introduction
- Cesarean-section (CS) deliveries have accounted
for nearly 1 million of approximately 4 million
annual deliveries in US. - Approximately 15 of CS was performed under
general anesthesia in US (Anesthesiology Hawkins,
JL 1997). Majority of CS were done under urgent
or emergent situations. - In 2000, CS rate is about 22 in US, and 31.8 in
UTMB.
3Indications for General Anesthesia
- Fetal distress
- Significant coagulopathy
- Acute maternal hypovolemia and Homodynamic
instability - Sepsis or local skin infection
- failed regional anesthesia
- Maternal refusal of regional anesthesia
4Preoperative Preparation for General Anesthesia
- History Examination, LABs
- Airway evaluation
- Aspiration prophylaxis
- Basic machine and monitor preparation
5Factors may complicate endotracheal intubations
- Weight gain
- Oropharynx edema
- Enlarged breasts
- Obesity with short neck
- Full dentition
- Mallampati IV and mamdibular recession
- History of difficult airway
6Airway evaluation
- Anticipation of difficult endotracheal intubation
(1 in 300 in OB and 1 in 2000 all patients) - Thorough examination of neck, mandible,
dentition, and Oropharynx - Training and experience (Hawthorne L. Br J.
Anesth 1996 76 680-684) - Sniffing position
7Airway evaluation
sniffing position
Moderate head elevation, extension of
atlanto-occipital, and flexion of the lower
portion of the cervical spine
8Preparation and Prevention
- 2-3 different blades, ie MAC 34 Miller 2
- 6 to 7 mm ETT tubes with stylets
- LMAs sizes 3 and 4
- Emergency airway cart ready in the OR
- Fiberoptic bronchoscope
- Possible surgical airway equipment
9Aspiration prophylaxis
- Pulmonary aspiration 1 in 400-500 in OB versus
1 in 2000 in all surgical patients - No agent or combination of agents can guarantee
that a parturient will not aspirate or develop
pneumonitis following failed intubations
10Factors increase the risk of aspiration
- Decrease in gastric and intestinal motility
- delayed gastric emptying by anxiety and pain
- Relaxation of lower esophageal sphincter tone
- Increase in abdominal pressure
- Increase gastric acid secretion
- Patients not fasting
11Prevention of Aspiration-Pharmacological agents
- PO 30 ml 0.3 M sodium citrate 15-30 minute prior
to induction - H2 blocker, ranitidine 50 mg IV
- Metoclopramide 10 mg IV, at least 5 minute prior
to induction - Omeprazole 40 mg the night before and the AM of
surgery for high risk patients - Ondansetron 4-8 mg IV
12Prevention of Aspiration
- Cricoid pressure
- Adequate oxygenation of patient
- Treat hypotension promptly
- Efficient and timely intubation
- Orogastric or nasogastric tube
- Awake extubation
13Basic Machine and Monitor Preparation
- Monitors esp. capnograph
- Suction tubing functional
- Airway equipments ready and functional
- LMAs 2nd line of defense of difficult airway
- Others ie. meds
14Intraoperative Management of Parturient
- Positioning
- Oxygenation
- Monitors
- Induction of general anesthesia
- Maintenance of general anesthesia
- Emergence from general anesthesia
15Intraoperative Management-Positioning
- OR bed should be allowing trendelenburg and
reversed positions - Sniffing position
- Patients in supine position with a wedge under
the right hip - Head and back up position if preparing awake
fiberoptic intubation
16Intraoperative Management-Denitrogenation
- Denitrogenation with O2 as soon as patient on OR
bed - Seal mask to achieve 100 O2
- 3-5 minutes or 4 VC breaths of 100 O2
- O2 saturation drops faster during apnea (increase
VO2 and decrease FRC)
17Intraoperative Management-Monitors
- Pulse oximeter probe
- Right size BP cuff
- Electrocardiographic electrodes
- capnograph
- Temperature monitor readily available
- Urinary output
18Intraoperative Management
- Communicate with surgeons and nursing staffs
while pt is prepared and draped for surgery - Final check for your READINESS FOR INDUCTION of
general anesthesia
19Induction of general anesthesia
- Rapid sequence induction
- Cricoid pressure maintained until endotracheal
tube cuff inflated and tube placement confirmed - AgentsThiopental/Ketamine/Propofol/Etomidate/Succ
inylcholine
20Induction Agents-Thiopental
- Thiopental (STP) 2-5 mg/kg IV
- Fast and reliable
- Negative inotrope and vasodilator
- Cross placenta STP concentration rarely exceed
the threshold for fetal depression with dose less
than 4 mg/kg - No evidence of adverse effect of STP on fetus
even the induction-to-delivery (ID) interval is
prolonged keep incision to delivery time less
than 4-7 minutes
21Induction Agents-Propofol
- Propofol 1-2.5 mg/kg IV
- Rapid induction and rapid awakening
- Negative inotrope and vasodilator
- May inhibit oxytocin induced uterine contraction
- Can be rapidly cleared from neonatal circulation
- Dose greater than 2.8 mg/kg may result in lower
apgar scores and lower neurobehavioral scores at
1 hour after delivery comparing with STP, but
similar neurobehavioral scores by 4 hours after
delivery (Celleno D. Br J Anesth 1989 62649-54)
22Induction Agents-Ketamine
- Ketamine 1-2.0 mg/kg IV
- Modest hemorrhage or parturient asthma
- Provide rapid analgesia, hypnosis, and amnesia
- May depress myocardium and reduce CO and BP in
severe hypovolemic patients - Avoid in hypertensive patients
- More than 2 mg/kg may associate with fetal
depression - Maternal psychotropic profiles dreaming,
dysphoria, hallucination during emergence
(benzodiazepine reduce the side effects)
23Induction Agents-Etomidate
- Etomidate 0.2-0.3 mg/kg IV
- Cause little CV depression-for HD unstable
parturient - Neonatal adrenal suppression?
- pain at injection site
- Myoclonus
24Induction Agents-Succinylcholine
- Succinylcholine (SUX) 0.3 to 1.5 mg/kg IV
- Spontaneous ventilation may resume in 2-3 minutes
with low dose SUX (0.3-0.5 mg/kg), but peak time
delayed by about 10-15 seconds - 3rd line of defense of difficult airway
- Recovery from intubation dose of SUX is unchanged
in the pregnant patients
25Maintenance of General Anesthesia
- PREDELIVEY
- 50 O2/50N2O/0.5 Isoflurane
- 100 O2/1-1.5 Isoflurane
- POSTDELIVERY
- 50-70 N2O/30-50O2/
- 0.5 Isoflurane/Narcotics
- Minimize volatile agents to prevent postpartum
hemorrhage 0.5 MAC does not significantly
increase maternal blood loss
26Maintenance of General Anesthesia
- Succinylcholine bolus when needed
- Nondepolarizing agents accordingly ie. Nimbex,
Vecuronium, Rocutonium. - Oxytocin 10-40 U IV infusion
- Antibiotics of choice
27Emergence from General Anesthesia
- Stomach emptied via an OG tube
- Upper airway suctioned
- Nondepolarizing agents reversed adequately
- Opioids for pain relief
- Extubation when patients regain protective
reflexes are able to maintain airway respond
appropriately to verbal commands and are
hemodynamically stable
28Awareness during General Anesthesia
- High incidence between induction of anesthesia
and delivery of the fetus - Administration of only 50 N2O in oxygen without
other agents results in maternal awareness in
12-26 of cases (Warren TM Anesth Analg 1983
62516-20 Crawford JS Br J anesth 1971
43179-82 Abboud TK et al Acta Anesthesiol Scand
1985 29 663-8)
29Awareness during General Anesthesia
- Ketamine or combine ketamine and thiopental for
induction - Minimize of induction to delivery interval
- 50N2O/O2 with following AGENTS reduce awareness
to less than 1 - 0.6 isoflurane
- 1 sevoflurane
- 3 desflurane
30Fetus Consideration during Emergency Cesarean
Section
- Decision to Incision or interval 30 minutes?
- Uterine Incision to Delivery (UD) interval should
be less than 3 minutes (Datta et al Obstet
Gynecol 1981 58331-335. Crawford JS. Et al.
Br J. Anesth 1973 45726-732) - Neonates delivered after 3 minutes following
uterine incision had lower apgar and acidotic
blood gas - Ultimate neonatal outcome? (Ong BY. Et al Anesth
Analg 1998 68270-5)
31Ong BY. et al Anesth Analg 1998 68270-5
- Increase incidence of low 1 minute apgar scores
in elective under GA - Increase incidence of low 1 and 5 minutes apgar
scores in emergency under GA - No different in ultimate neonatal outcome
32Factors Cause Uterine Artery Spasm
- Uterine incision
- Contraction of myometrial muscles
- Vasoconstrictors prostaglandin released from
fetus and placenta - Maternal catecholamine release
33Post Anesthesia Care
- Transport to PACU with O2
- Hypoxemia airway obstruction and
hypoventilation - Hypotension
- Pain control
- Nausea and Vomiting
- Shivering and hypothermia