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CASE PRESENTATION PREECLAMPSIA

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CASE PRESENTATION PREECLAMPSIA PRESENTED BY : Avneep Aggarwal MODERATOR : Anjan Trikha www.anaesthesia.co.in anaesthesia.co.in_at_gmail.com Magnesium levels ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CASE PRESENTATION PREECLAMPSIA


1
CASE PRESENTATIONPREECLAMPSIA
  • PRESENTED BY Avneep Aggarwal
  • MODERATOR Anjan Trikha

www.anaesthesia.co.in anaesthesia.co.in_at_gmail.c
om
2
HISTORY
  • Name Savita
  • Age 27 yrs
  • Resident of New delhi
  • Date of admission 11/08/08
  • Presenting complaint Missed periods for 8
    months

3
History of present illness
  • Primipara, second gravida (G2P1)
  • LMP 17/01/08
  • EDD 23/10/08
  • Gestational period 34 weeks 3 days

4
ANTENATAL HISTORY
  • FIRST TRIMESTER
  • Registered at an antenatal clinic at a pvt
    hospital
  • Started on iron and folic acid tablets
  • No history of severe vomiting or any other
    signficant illness in the first trimester.

5
  • SECOND TRIMESTER
  • Quickening 5th month .
  • Tetanus toxoid .
  • First visit AIIMS 21st week of gestation
  • High BP (150/96)mm Hg.
  • Admitted to ward .
  • Treatment Aldomet 500mg qid and tab depin 20 mg
    bd
  • Discharged after 1 week .
  • Advice BP monitoring
  • Information regarding preeclampsia
    .
  • No further visits to ANC in the second trimester
    .

6
  • THIRD TRIMESTER
  • Visit to antenatal clinic at 34 wks of gestation
  • High BP(174/ 100) mm Hg detected,
  • Urine albumin 1
  • FHR
  • No history of headache, visual disturbances,
    epigastric pain, jaundice, decreased urine
    output, seizures .
  • No history of bleeding per vaginum

7
  • Admitted in ward .
  • BP monitored hourly .
  • Antihypertensives continued .
  • Magnesium sulfate started .
  • Urine albumin monitored 4 hourly .
  • Inj Betamethasone 12 mg im od for 2 days .
  • Next day
  • BP 180/112 mmHg
  • Urine albumin 3
  • Fundoscopy gr 2 hypertnsive retinopathy
  • FHR monitoring- fetal distress .
  • Emergency caesarean section planned .

8
PAST HISTORY
  • Past medical history No history of any chronic
    illness.
  • Drug history no history of any drug allergy.
  • Family history- not significant

9
PAST OBSTETRIC HISTORY
  • Married for 4 yrs
  • Previous pregnancy complicated with severe
    preeclampsia
  • Emergency LSCS was done at 35th wk of pregnancy
  • ?Spinal anaesthesia ( records NA )
  • Baby healthy , 2.5 kg , cried at birth

10
  • MENSTRUAL HISTORY
  • Previous menstrual cycles regular,
  • Normal flow
  • 3-4/ 30 days
  • PERSONAL HISTORY-No addiction-Housewife

11
EXAMINATION
  • Weight 65 kg
  • Height 150 cm
  • BMI 28.9 kg/m2
  • Afebrile,
  • pallor- / Jaundice-/ Cyanosis-/ clubbing- /
  • B/L pedal edema
  • Neck veins not engorged
  • Pulse 110/min, regular, normal volume , all
    peripheral pulses felt
  • B.P.-176/110 mmHg in (R) upper arm in supine
    position.
  • No bleeding manifestation

12
  • RESPIRATORY SYSTEM
  • Respiratory rate 20/min
  • B/l air entry equal
  • Normal vesicular breath sounds
  • CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM
  • Apex beat lt 4th intercostal space, 1 cm lateral
    to mid clavicular line
  • S1 S2 (N)
  • No murmur

13
  • ABDOMINAL EXAMINATION
  • INSPECTION
  • Abdomen distended
  • Umblicus inverted
  • Previous caesarian scar present
  • PALPATION
  • Fundal height 32 wks
  • Vertex presentation
  • No epigastric tenderness
  • AUSCULTATION
  • FHR, 130/ min

14
  • AIRWAY EXAMINATION
  • Mouth opening gt3 fb
  • Teeth no loose tooth
  • Thyromental distance 7cm
  • Sternomental distance 13cm
  • Neck movements
  • Flexion - adequate
  • Extension - adequate
  • Mallampatti class II
  • BHT-26 sec

15
  • CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM
  • Conscious , oriented to time place and person
  • Motor function muscle tone, power and DTR
    within normal limits
  • Sensory function within normal limits
  • Fundus examination ( gr 2 hypertensive
    retinopathy)
  • -flame shaped hge
  • -macula normal
  • -no pappiloedema

16
PROVISIONAL DIAGNOSIS
  • A 27 yr old , G2P1 at 34 weeks of gestation with
    severe preeclampsia .

17
Investigations
  • Hb-11.5
  • Hct-36
  • Platelet Count 120,000/cumm
  • TLC-8600
  • PT 13/16
  • RBS-89mg/dl
  • Urea-21
  • Uric acid 8.0 mg/dl
  • Creatinine 1.2mg/dl

18
  • Ca2-9.4
  • Phosphate-5.3
  • Na/K - 149/4.8
  • Total Bilirubin 0.8
  • Total Protein 7.6 Albumin-4.5 Globulin 3.1
  • SGOT/PT 34/45
  • ALP-521
  • BT Normal
  • Urine Albumin 3, sugar nil
  • CXR PA view
  • No bony / parenchymal abnormalities
  • Cardiac Shadow Normal
  • B/L CP angle Clear

19
  • Plan spinal anaesthesia
  • Preparation
  • -equipment
  • -drugs
  • -monitors
  • N.I.B.P., I.B.P as required.
  • E.C.G.,
  • pulse oximetry
  • Respiratory rate
  • Urine output
  • Uterine Contraction monitoring
  • Continuous foetal heart rate monitoring.

20
  • Aspiration prophylaxis.
  • Made sure that blood and blood products are
    available
  • Started a second peripheral intravenous line.
  • Preloaded with 500 mL of crystalloid (RL)
  • Monitoring the fetal heart rate until the
    beginning of surgery.
  • Oxygen by face mask .
  • Spinal anaesthesia with 1.5ml of 0.5 bupivacaine
    with 25 micgm of fentanyl was given .
  • Maintain left uterine displacement .

21
  • Surgery completed w/o complication .
  • Female child, 1.9 kg, cried at birth .
  • Fluids LR 500 ml, EBL 700, UOP 250.

22
POSTOP COURSE
  • Persistent high BP (150 160 / 90- 100 mmHg) on
    postpartum day 1
  • Started on
  • -tab.ramipril 5 mg od
  • -tab hydrochlorthiazide 12.5 mg od
  • No seizures, breathlessness
  • Postop analgesia
  • -inj tramadol 50mg iv tds
  • -tab.Paracetamol 1g orally 6 hourly

23
  • To maintain strict I/O charting for atleast 24
    hrs.
  • Magnesium sulfate to continue for atleast 24 hrs.

24
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25
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26
CLASSIFICATION
  • Preeclampsia(6- 8)
  • Eclampsia (0.05 )
  • Gestational Hypertension(6-7)
  • Chronic Hypertension(3-5)
  • Chronic Hypertension with


    superimposed P.I.H

27
A.C.O.G Criteria
  • Mild pre-eclampsia
  • B.P. ? 140/90 (2 occasions,6 hrs.Apart)
  • Proteinuria gt 0.3 gm/24hrs. Severe
    pre-eclampsia
  • B.P. ? 160/110
  • Proteinuria ? 5 gm /24 hrs
  • ?S. Creatinine gt1.6.
  • Oliguria lt 500 ml./24 hrs.
  • Thrombocytopenia
  • CerebraL involvement headache, visual
    disturbances
  • Rt. Upper quadrant epigastric pain
  • Elevated liver enzyme(HELLP)
  • Pulmonary edema, CHF
  • Seizures Eclampsia

28
?vasopressor
  • Ephedrine less effective than alpha adrenergic
    agents associated with foetal acidosis,
    maternal tachycardia and reactive hypertension.
  • Alpha agonists more effective than ephedrine,
    better foetal acid base status but maternal
    bradycardia.
  • Although a recent study supports the use of
    phenylephrine during regional anesthesia in
    uncomplicated term pregnancy , ephedrine
    increases uterine and placental circulation after
    epidural anesthesia-induced hypotension more than
    phenylephrine.

29
  • Because feto-placental circulation may be
    compromised in severe pre-eclampsia, ephedrine
    might have more benefit to the newborn than
    phenylephrine.
  • No evidence suggests that treating
    anesthetic-induced hypotension with ephedrine
    increases the risks of seizures in patients with
    pre-eclampsia.
  • Considering the potential benefits to
    feto-placental circulation, It seems that
    ephedrine is the drug of choice to treat
    hypotension in severe pre-eclampsia.
  • Anesth Analg 2006103 1584

30
?Spinal vs GA
  • When compared with healthy parturients incidence
    of
  • hypotension which is defined as 30 decrease
    in
  • mean BP, is less in patients with severe
    preeclampsia
  • undergoing spinal anesthesia for cesarean
  • delivery.
  • The use of spinal anesthesia in severe
    preeclamptic patients has no significant
    differences in maternal blood pressure or
    neonatal Apgar scores compared to epidural
    anesthesia in this retrospective study with
    limited number of patients
  • Retrospective study (Hood Curry, 1999) found
    no difference in hemodynamic changes after spinal
    or epidural anesthesia

31
  • References
  • 1 Howell P. Spinal anesthesia in severe
    preeclampsia time for
  • reappraisal, or time for caution? Int J Obstet
    Anesth
  • 199872179.
  • 2 Aya AGM, Mangin R, Vialles N, Ferrer JM,
    Robert C, Ripart J,
  • et al. Patients with severe preeclampsia
    experience less
  • hypotension during spinal anesthesia for elective
    cesarean
  • delivery than healthy parturients a prospective
    cohort
  • comparison. Anesth Analg 200397867 72.
  • 3 Hood DD, Curry RN. Spinal versus epidural
    anesthesia for
  • cesarean section in severely preeclamptic
    patients a
  • retrospective survey. Anesthesiology
    1999901276 82
  • Gatt SP. Clinical management of established
    pre-eclampsia
  • and gestational hypertension an anaesthetists
    perspective.
  • Baillieres Best Pract Res Clin Obstet Gynaecol
    199913
  • 95 105.

32
?Aspirin Prophylaxis
  • The role of aspirin in prevention of APO is still
    controversial.
  • The CLASP study did not support the routine
    prophylactic or
  • therapeutic administration of LDA to all women at
    increased
  • risk of preeclampsia or fetal growth retardation.
  • However,the study did suggest the role of LDA in
    women at increased
  • risk of early onset severe preeclampsia.
  • A systematic review of 39 randomized controlled
    trials of LDA for
  • prevention of preeclampsia found an overall
    reduction in PE of
  • 15,along with reductions in the rate of IUGR.

33
Magnesium sulfate
  • There is no agreement in the published randomized
    trials
  • regarding the optimal time to initiate magnesium
    sulfate,
  • the dose to use (both loading and maintenance),
    the
  • route of administration (i.m. or intravenous
    i.v.), as
  • well as the duration of therapy.
  • Women with imminent eclampsia are the best
    candidates to receive
  • magnesium sulfate prophylaxis.
  • Even then, magnesium sulfate might
  • prevent complications related to seizures (status
    epileptics,
  • maternal trauma, or aspiration), but it may not
  • affect serious maternal complications of severe
    preeclampsia,
  • such as pulmonary edema, stroke, liver,
  • hematoma, or renal failure.

34
Magnesium levels
Therapeutic range 4-6 meq. / L Normal
levels 1.5 -2 meq. /L Monitoring
Knee jerk Mg. Levels (if possible)
respiration, urine output (gt100 ml. in 4 hrs.).
Toxicity 6-8 meq./ L -
Nausea, Vomiting, diplopia,
somnolence decrease
myometrial contractility.
5-10 meq./L - Increase PQ interval,
wide QRS 10 meq. / L - Loss of
deep tendon reflexes. 15 meq./L -
SA AV block
respiratory paralysis. 25 meq./L
- Cardiac arrest
35
Magpie Trial Lancet, July 2002
  • gt10 000 women
  • world-wide co-ordinated from Oxford UK
  • BP ?140/90 and proteinuria (30 mg/100 ml)
  • 4g Mg i.v. over 10-15 min, 1g/hr for 24 hr
  • or placebo
  • EclampsiaMg 0.8 (40/5055) vs placebo 1.9
    (96/5055)
  • NNT 91
  • Maternal deaths 11 Mg, 20 placebo p 0.11
  • Few attributed to eclampsia

36
Magpie Trial Lancet, July 2002
  • Mg neither antihypertensive nor tocolytic
  • No adverse events with nifedipine Mg
  • No serum monitoring
  • tendon reflexes, respiratory rate, urine output
  • Side effects
  • 24 of women on Mg, 5 on placebo
  • flushing, nausea/vomiting
  • 5 Mg vs 2 placebo respiratory arrests
  • 10 Mg vs 6 placebo MI or cardiac failure

37
EVE Use in preeclampsia
  • Historically spinal anaesthesia has been
    considered hazardous in patients with
    preeclampsia, although conventional dose
    single-shot spinals have been shown to be safe
    and Modest falls of mean arterial pressure
    (122-103 mmHg) in severe preeclampsia have been
    demonstrated using low-dose CSE for caesarean
    section, but this study lacked a control group. A
    retrospective chart analysis of patients with
    preeclampsia undergoing caesarean section under
    epidural or low-dose CSE concluded that low-dose
    CSE appeared to be a safe technique for
    preeclamptic women. However the study was
    retrospective, with many more patients receiving
    epidural anaesthesia than CSE (62 vs. 15). A
    recent case report described good haemodynamic
    stability when a low-dose CSE using intrathecal
    hyperbaric levobupivacaine 5 mg with fentanyl 25
    µg and EVE with saline 10 mL was used.
  • Epidural volume extension and low-dose
    sequential combined spinal- epidural blockade
    two ways to reduce spinal dose requirement for
    caesarean section
  • International Journal of Obstetric
    AnesthesiaVolume 16, Issue 4, October 2007,
    Pages 346-353

38
Invasive Central Hemodynamic Monitoring in
Preeclampsia
  • Usually reserved for patients with complications
  • oliguria unresponsive to modest fluid challenge
    (500 cc LR X 2)
  • pulmonary edema
  • refractory hypertension
  • may have increased CO or increased SVR
  • Poor correlation between CVP and PCWP in PIH
  • However, at most centers anesthesiologists would
    begin with CVP follow trend
  • not arbitrarily hydrate to a certain number
  • If poor response, change to PA catheter

39
  • The status of central hemodynamic monitoring is
    controversial.
  • There may be a poor correlation between CVP LAP
    in pre-eclamptic patients
  • ASA obstetric practice anaesthesia guidelines
    report insufficient data demonstrating the use of
    CVP / PA catheter.
  • Guidelines suggest that it is not neceesary to
    use invasive central hemodynamic monitoring
    routinely in severe pre eclamptic pts. unless
    there are clear cut indications due to assoc. med
    problems .

40
ICU management of PIH patient
  • Pts requiring admission in ICU
  • Severe Hypertension with neurological symp
  • Severe oliguria requiring dialysis
  • Rptd convulsions
  • DIC, HELLP, severe PPH
  • Cerebral Hmg edema
  • Intra abd. Catastrophe liver rupture hematoma
  • Pulmonary edema, CHF

41
HELLP Syndrome
  • 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

42
Management 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

43
  • 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

44
  • 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

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om
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