Title: Preeclampsia in the Parturient Implications in Anesthesia
1Preeclampsia in the ParturientImplications in
Anesthesia
- Robyn C. Ward, CRNA, MS
- LCDR, NC, USN
- Naval Medical Center San Diego
www.anaesthesia.co.in anaesthesia.co.in_at_gmail.c
om
2Objectives
- Discuss preeclampsia risk factors,
pathophysiology, obstetric/anesthetic management - Discuss eclampsia
- Discuss HELLP syndrome
3Introduction
- Preeclampsia is a major cause of maternal and
perinatal morbidity and mortality - Direct fetal effects
- Indirect effects due to preterm deliveries
- Affects 5 of all pregnancies
- 35-300 deaths per 1000 births (twice that of
normotensive pregnancies)
4Classification 4 Categories
- Gestational hypertension
- Chronic hypertension
- Chronic hypertension w/ superimposed preeclampsia
- Preeclampsia mild, moderate, or severe
5Gestational Hypertension
- Transient HTN of BP gt 140/90 without proteinuria
or end-organ damage - May occur late in pregnancy, during labor, or
within 24 hrs postpartum - BP returns to normal within 10 days postpartum
6Chronic Hypertension
- Begins prior to pregnancy
- BP gt 140/90
- Occurs prior to 20th week gestation
- Not associated with proteinuria or end-organ
damage - Continues well after delivery
7Preeclampsia Mild to Severe
- Occurs after 20 weeks gestation
- Triad
- Hypertension
- Proteinuria
- Edema
8Preeclampsia - Mild
- Hypertension SBP gt 140 mm Hg, DBP gt 90 mm Hg
- Proteinuria gt 300 mg/24 hr
- Generalized edema
9Preeclampsia - Severe
- Hypertension SBP gt 160 mm Hg, DBP gt 110 mm Hg
- Proteinuria gt 5 g in 24 hr
- Generalized edema
- Evidence of end-organ damage
- Oliguria U/O lt 400 ml/24 hr and/or elevated
serum creatinine - Cerebral edema w/ visual disturbances (blurred
vision) or headache
10Preeclampsia Severe (cont)
- Evidence of end-organ damage (cont.)
- Pulmonary edema
- Hepatocellular dysfunction
- Elevated liver enzymes
- Epigastric or RUQ pain
- HELLP syndrome
- Intrauterine growth restriction or
oligohydramnios
11Risk Factors
- Maternal Pre-existing Conditions
- Maternal Specific Factors
- Partner-Related Factors
- Pregnancy-Associated Factors
12Maternal Pre-existing Conditions
- Chronic hypertension
- Renal disease
- Diabetes mellitus
- Obesity
13Maternal Specific Factors
- Advance maternal age gt 40
- Familial predisposition
- Nulliparity and young age
- History of preeclampsia
14Partner-Related Factors
- Paternal antigens
- Immune maladaptation
- Trophoblastic invasion at 12 weeks
- Second invasion at 14-16 weeks changes spiral
arteries from high to low resistance vessels
prostacyclin and nitric oxide are released from
endethelium - Second invasion fails in preeclampsia
15Pregnancy-Associated Factors
- Multiple gestation increased risk
- Congenital anomalies
- Antepartum urinary tract infection
16Pathophysiology
- Immunologic factors
- Genetic factors
- Endothelial factors
- Platelet factors
- Calcium
17Immunologic Factors
- Fifty percent genes from father
- Fetal trophoblast invades maternal deciduas after
implantation - Second trophoblastic invasion at 14-16 weeks
normally disrupts maternal spiral arteries
changing them to low resistance vessels - This 2nd wave of invasion fails in preeclampsia
18Genetic Factors
- Possibly recessive genetic inheritance
- Variant angiotensinogen gene T 235 if
homozygous, 20 fold increased risk for
preeclampsia
19Endothelial Factors
- Vascular endothelial damage
- Occurs in placental deciduas, renal
microvasculature and, potentially, hepatic,
myocardial and cerebral circulations - Failure of trophoblast invasion causes increases
production of free radicals which exacerbate
endothelial damage - Overall result is deficiency of prostacyclin
(vasodilator) in relation to thromboxane
(vasoconstrictor)
20Platelet Factors
- Surface mediated platelet activation occurs in
absence of prostacyclin - Favors platelet adhesion to damaged surface
lining of spiral arteries - Further platelet aggregation promoted by platelet
release of dense granules, including TXA2 and 5HT
21Platelet Factors (cont.)
- Mild preeclampsia, 5HT binds to endothelial 5HT-1
receptors - stimulates partial recovery of endothelial
prostacyclin and nitric oxide release - Prostacyclin stimulates renin angiotensin
aldosterone system, which improves placental
perfusion by inducing maternal HTN
22Platelet Factors (cont.)
- Severe preeclampsia, serotonin cannot interact
with 5HT-1 receptors on endothelium - Binds instead to 5HT-2 receptors on vascular
smooth muscle cells and platelet membranes - Results in worsening HTN and intravascular
thrombosis
23Calcium
- Calcium increases slowly throughout normal
pregnancy to maintain vascular tone - In preeclampsia, this increase is much greater by
3rd trimester due to increased cellular membrane
permeability
24Clinical Manifestations
- Cardiovascular
- Respiratory
- Neurologic
- Renal
- Hematologic
- Hepatic
- Uteroplacental unit
25Cardiovascular
- HTN
- Intravascular volume depletion
- shift of intravascular fluid and protein to
extravascular space due to decreased colloid
oncotic pressure and increased capillary
permeability (due to endothelial cell damage)
26Respiratory
- Upper AW narrowing from pharyngolaryngeal edema
- difficulty in intubation
- Pulmonary edema in 3 of cases
- Increased capillary permeability
- Decreased colloid oncotic pressure
- LV dysfunction
- Excessive fluid administration
27Neurologic
- Cerebral irritation due to CNS edema
- Headache 40 of patients
- Nausea, excitability, apprehension and visual
disturbances (blurred vision) - Hyperreflexia/Clonus seizures if progresses to
eclampsia - Intracranial hemorrhage is leading cause of
maternal death from preeclampsia
28Renal
- Diminished renal perfusion and glomerular
filtration - Proteinuria
- Decreased uric acid clearance
- Oliguria lt 400 ml/24 hrs
- Elevated serum creatinine
29Hematologic
- Elevated Hct secondary to plasma volume
contraction - Thrombocytopenia in 30 of patients
- PLT lt 100K correlates with severe disease
- Activation of coagulation cascade can occur
- Increased incidence of placental abruption which
can result in DIC
30Hepatic
- Impaired liver function can be caused by
- Periportal hepatic necrosis
- Subscapular hemorrhages
- Fibrin deposition in hepatic sinusoids
- Elevated liver enzymes (HELLP)
31Uteroplacental Unit
- Uteroplacental insufficiency due to increased
vascular resistance, decreased plasma volume, and
increased blood viscosity - Compromises uterine blood flow by 50-70
32Treatment
- Obstetric management
- Adequate fetal surveillance
- Antihypertensive management
- Anticonvulsant therapy
- Anesthetic management of labor
- Safe analgesia for labor and anesthesia for
delivery
33Obstetric Management
- Expectant management (lt 34 weeks)
- Bed rest and sedation
- Antihypertensive therapy
- Monitoring of weight, U/O and DTRs
- MgSO4 for seizure prophylaxis
34Obstetric Management
- Aggressive management
- Induction of labor/delivery within 48-72 hours
- Delivery is only curative treatment
- If possible, time allowed for 2 doses of steroids
to mother to promote fetal lung maturity - Indications for immediate delivery
- Uncontrolled HTN gt 160/110
- Oliguria/renal dysfunction
- Liver dysfunction
- Imminent eclampsia
- Pulmonary edema
- Fetal compromise
35Fetal Surveillance
- Fetal ultrasound
- Continuous electronic fetal monitoring
- Monitor for
- Loss of beat-to-beat variability of FHR and
periodic late decelerations
36Antihypertensive Management
- Goal control HTN and maintain uteroplacental
perfusion - Acute therapy Long Term
- Hydralazine Alpha methyl dopa
- Labetalol (IV) Labetalol (po)
- Nifedipine
- Nitroglycerin
- Nitroprusside
37Anticonvulsant Therapy
- MgSO4 first line agent in U.S.
- Cerebral vasodilator
- Central anticonvulsant effect
- Peripheral vasodilator effect
- Other
- Phenytoin (Dilantin)
- Diazepam
38Magnesium
- Dose
- 4-6 g over 20 min w/ infusion of 1-2 g/hr
- Therapeutic range 4-8 mg/dl
- Side effects sedation, skeletal/muscle
weakness, decreased uterine activity, decreased
FHR variability, prolonged labor, uterine atony,
prolongation of NM blockade, neonatal hypotonia
39Magnesium (cont.)
- Toxicity
- 4-8 mg/dl therapeutic
- 10-12 mg/dl loss of DTRs
- 12-15 mg/dl respiratory arrest
- 20-25 mg/dl cardiac arrest
- Treatment
- Calcium gluconate 10 ml of 10 solution IV over 2
minutes - Oxygen
- Mechanical ventilation if necessary
40Anesthetic Management of Labor
- Preanesthetic assessment
- Airway
- Aspiration prophylaxis
- Auscultation of lungs
- Fluid balance
- Hemodynamic status
- Left uterine displacement
- Renal function
- Coagulation status
41Analgesia for Labor
- Continuous lumbar epidural Advantages
- Decreased circulating catecholamines
- Decreased uterine vascular resistance
- Improved uteroplacental blood flow
- Avoids risk of general anesthesia
42Epidural Placement
- R/O coagulopathy, LUD, oxygen, continuous fetal
monitoring - Careful crystalloid preload (250-500 ml)
- Local anesthetic Bupivicaine (slow onset)
- Epinephrine consider avoiding
- Slow, incremental dosing
- Ephedrine (in smaller doses) for hypotension lt
20 of baseline
43Anesthesia for Delivery
- Non-emergent C-section
- Epidural anesthesia thought to allow for
incremental dosing, potentially avoiding
precipitous hypotension - Spinal anesthesia recent retrospective study
(Hood Curry, 1999) found no difference in
hemodynamic changes after spinal or epidural
anesthesia - Conclusion spinal is safe alternative to
epidural w/ added advantage of quicker onset and
better quality of sensory blockade especially in
urgent situations
44Anesthesia for Delivery
- Emergent C-section
- Epidural previously placed, well functioning
- Spinal if no epidural placed and if FHR stable
- General anesthesia
- Coagulopathy
- Patient refusal of regional
- Fetal bradycardia prohibits placement in time
45Eclampsia
- Convulsions that occur during pregnancy in a
woman whose condition also meets criteria for
preeclampsia and who has no other previous
neurologic disease or diagnosis of epilepsy - Etiology uncertain cerebral edema, ischemia
- Tonic-clonic in nature
- Life threatening emergency
46Eclampsia (cont.)
- 50 have evidence of severe preeclampsia
- Classical presentation of preeclampsia may be
absent or mildly abnormal in 30 of patients
47Management of Eclampsia
- Goals
- Stabilization of the mother/seizure control
- MgSO4 therapy 4-6 g over 20 min followed by
infusion of 1-3 g/hr, OR - Thiopental or diazepam followed by MgSO4 infusion
- Avoid anticonvulsant polypharmacy
- Airway management
- Avoiding aspiration
48Obstetric Management of Eclampsia
- Factors to consider patients condition,
gestational age, cervical exam, and fetal well
being - Induction of labor if patient is seizure free,
stable, favorable cervix, and reassuring fetal
heart tracing - Urgent c-section if patient continues to have
breakthrough seizures
49Anesthetic Management of Eclampsia
- Aspiration precautions
- Careful airway assessment
- Guidelines for use of regional vs. general
anesthesia similar to patients with severe
preeclampsia
50ABCs of Seizure Control
- Airway
- Breathing
- Circulation
- Drugs
- Blood Pressure
51HELLP Syndrome
- Severe preeclampsia complicated by
- Hemolysis
- Elevated liver enzymes
- Low platelets
- First reported by Weinstein in 1982
- Occurs in 12 of pregnancies complicated by
preeclampsia or eclampsia
52HELLP Syndrome
- Clinical presentation (extremely variable)
- RUQ or epigastric pain
- N/V
- Malaise
- Headache, visual disturbances
- Weight gain/edema
53Differential Diagnosis of HELLP
- Biliary colic, cholecystitis
- Hepatitis
- Gastroesophageal reflux
- Gastroenteritis
- Pancreatitis
- Ureteral calculi or pyelonephritis
- ITP or TTP
54Laboratory Findings in HELLP
- Hemolysis
- Abnormal peripheral smear
- Total bilirubin gt 1.2 mg/dl
- LDH gt 600 IU/L
- Liver Enzymes
- AST (SGOT) gt 70 IU/L
- Platelet count
- lt 100,000
55Management of HELLP Syndrome
- Stabilize mother control BP, prevent seizures
- Evaluate fetus
- Determine optimal timing and route for delivery
- Provide continued monitoring and management
during postpartum period - All women should receive MgSO4
56HELLP New Treatments
- Dexamethasone 10 mg IV q12hr when platelets lt
100,000 - Platelets for active bleeding, or if lt 20,000
- Plasmapheresis limited success, but not
routinely recommended
57HELLP Syndrome
- Expeditious delivery usually warranted
- Poor maternal and fetal outcome if delivery
delayed - Infants gt 28 weeks gestation are routinely
delivered 48 hrs after first maternal dose of
dexamethasone - Diagnosis occasionally missed as some patients
present without triad of preeclampsia
58HELLP Syndrome (cont.)
- Regional Anesthesia?
- Platelet counts gt 80-100K usually safe to receive
regional without risk of hematoma - If lt 70-80K, risks of hematoma vs risks of GA
must be weighed - In presence of easy predicted AW, regional
generally avoided - Presence of difficult AW, regional anesthesia may
be considered after platelet transfusion prior to
procedure
59References
- Chandrasekhar, Datta Anesthetic management of
the preeclamptic parturient Current Reviews for
Nurse Anesthetists 25(3) 25-40, 2002. - Gambling D, Writer D Hypertensive disorders in
pregnancy. In Chestnut DH Obstetric
Anesthesia, Principles and Practice (3rd ed).
Mosby, 2004. - Hood D, Curry R Spinal versus epidural
anesthesia for cesarean section in severely
preeclamptic patients A retrospective survey.
Anesthesiology 90 1276-1282, 1999.
www.anaesthesia.co.in anaesthesia.co.in_at_gmail.c
om