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Anesthesia for the Pregnant patient Undergoing Nonobstetric surgery

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... maternal oxygenation and fetal oxygenation ... oral cleft anomaly reported - but case-control, prospective study: no relationship Opiods, iv induction agents, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Anesthesia for the Pregnant patient Undergoing Nonobstetric surgery


1
Anesthesia for the Pregnant patient Undergoing
Nonobstetric surgery
  • ????? ???????
  • R4 ? ??

2
  • Routine surgical Pt. happen to be pregnant
  • ? anxiety
    for most of us.
  • 2 of parturients surgery during
    pregnancy(80,000/yr)
  • - traumatic injury, ovarian cysts,
    appendicitis, cholelithiasis, breast biopsy,
    cervical incompetence
  • Despite of favorable results strong aversion to
    drugs and procedures performed during pregnancy
  • ? when pregnant women exposed to
    non-teratogenic drugs estimate 25 risk of
    congenital malformation
  • How do we counsel a pregnant patient?
  • What can you tell her about the risks to her
    pregnancy associated with anesthesia?

3
Physiology and Risk Assessment
  • Alteration in maternal physiology
  • - Respiratory oxygen consumption?, FRC ?, pCO2
    ?,
  • mucosal vascularity with
    potential bleeding?,
  • difficult intubation.
  • - Cardiovascular blood volume, C.O. ?,
    dilutional anemia,
  • aortocaval compression
    when supine,
  • vascular responsiveness ?.
  • - Gastrointestinal unclear-gastric volume, pH,
    emptying
  • G-E sphincter tone ?.
  • - CNS MAC ?, local anesthetic requirements ?.

4
  • Maintenance of uterine perfusion
  • - utmost importance to anesthetic during
    pregnancy
  • - maternal oxygenation and fetal oxygenation
  • - Avoid maternal hypoxia and hypotension
  • Prevention and treatment of preterm labor
  • - most difficult problem to overcome
  • - m/c cause of fetal loss
  • - not related anesthetic therapies,
  • but to the underlying disease and the
    surgery itself.
  • - no reliable therapies
  • - most studies pregnant women who require
    surgery
  • deliver earlier, and smaller babies

5
Teratogenic effects of anesthetics
  • Never demonstrated in human but probably minimal
  • nitrous oxide
  • - in animal adrenergin tone ? ? uterine
    vasoconstriction
  • ? abortion, congenital
    anomaly
  • - in human not demonstrated despite extensive
    use
  • Benzodiazepine
  • - oral cleft anomaly reported
  • - but case-control, prospective study no
    relationship
  • Opiods, iv induction agents, local anesthetics
  • long history of safety

6
  • NMDA blocker, GABAA enhancer
  • neurodegeneration, memory impairment in
    animal
  • but in human unclear
  • ? and these results associated with other
    anesthetic
  • conditions(hypoxia, respiratory acidosis,
    starvation)?
  • ? change our clinical practice?

7
ANESTHETIC MANAGEMANT
  • Preoperative assessment
  • - pregnancy test pregnancy status unsure
  • patient request
  • 3 weeks elapsed LMP
  • - 12-50 age LMP record in anesthetic chart.
  • - if possible, delay to second trimester,
    postpartum
  • - aspiration prophylaxis antacid, MXL,
    H2-antagonist
  • - preoperative tocolytics
  • indomethacin - few anesthetic implication
  • magnesium sulfate potentiate NDMR,
    hypotension

8
  • Intraoperative management
  • - Type of surgery, anesthetic, trimester, length
    of anesthesia no study has shown pregnancy
    outcome
  • - pCO2 about 10 torr ? due to ? minute
    ventilation
  • - avoid hypogylcemia ? BST
  • - fetal monitoring team approach
  • (surgeon, obsterician,
    anesthesiologist)
  • loss of beat-to-beat variability normal
  • but fetal bradycardia not
  • deceleration increase maternal
    oxygenation, BP,
  • uterine displacement,
    change
  • surgical retraction,
    tocolysis.
  • urgent situation, abdominal op - impractical

9
  • General anesthesia
  • - full preoxygenation, rapid sequence induction,
    avoid
  • hypoxia, slow reversal of relaxants
  • - keep in mind airway is more edematous,
    vascular,
  • and difficult
    visualization
  • - propofol ? oxytocin-induced contraction(animal)
  • - in 1st trimester, high dose ketamine(gt2mg/kg)
  • may cause uterine hypertonus
  • - inhalation agent
  • keep lt 2.0 MAC (prevent maternal C.O. ?)

10
  • Regional techniques
  • - minimizing drug exposure, change in FHR
  • - prevent hypotension with volume replacement,
  • uterine tilt, treat hypotension agressively
  • - local anesthetic dose 1/3 of nonpregnant
    patient
  • - exellent opstoperative pain control
  • ? can report Sx. of preterm labor
  • maintain FHR variability
  • early mobilization

11
  • Postoperative period
  • - monitoring FHR and uterine activity
  • - preterm labor treat early and aggressively
  • - parenteral pain medication
  • ? FHR variability ? regional tech. if
    possible
  • - high risk for thromboembolism ? early
    mobilization
  • if not possible, prophylactic
    anticoagulation

12
SPECIAL SITUATIONS
  • Cervcial cerclage
  • recent study may not be beneficial
  • m/c surgical procedure during pregnancy
  • Trauma
  • fetal loss due to maternal death, placental
    abruption
  • early ultrasound in ER to determine fetal
    viability,
  • fetal monitoring should be continued
  • emergent c/sec indication
  • - stable mather with a viable fetus in
    distress
  • - traumatic uterine rupture
  • - uterus interfereing with intra-abdominal
    repair
  • - mother who cant be save with a viable
    fetus

13
  • Neurosurgical procedures
  • aneurysmal clipping, AVM repair
  • fetal monitoring
  • - hypotension, large volume shift, blood loss
  • aggressive diuresis - reduce uterine
    perfusion,
  • fetal
    dehydration
  • hyperventilation
  • - reduce maternal C.O.
  • - O2-Hb dissociation curve
  • shift to left ? oxygen release to fetus ?

14
  • Cardiac surgery requiring bypass
  • physiologic increase in blood volume and C.O.
  • - maximal at 28-30 wks. ? cardiac
    decompensation
  • another high-risk period
  • - immediate postpartum (aortocaval compression
    ?,
  • uteroplacental autotransfusion ?
    C.O. ?)
  • op Ix. severe cardiac Sx.
  • - unresponsive to medical management
  • if possible, surgery delay to 2nd trimester
  • over 24wks fetal monitor, left uterine
    displacement
  • higher bypass flow and pressure
  • benefit uterine blood flow, and fetal
    oxygenation

15
  • Laparoscopic techniques
  • fetal outcome - similar in laparotomy and
    laparoscopy
  • in near-term sheep
  • - CO2 pneumoperitoneum not cause hypoxia,
    fetal hemodynamic change ? but induce respiratory
    acidosis
  • intra-abdominal pr ? maintain as low as
    possible
  • operative time kept to minimum
  • fetal shielding during cholangiogram, left
    lateral table rotation, pneumatic stoking.

16
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17
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18
Conclusions
  • Anesthesiologists should reassure the mother that
    anesthetic drug and techniques will not her fetus
    or pregnancy at risk
  • Prevention of preterm labor is greatest concern
    and may require perioperative monitoring and
    tocolysis
  • postoperative pain management without sedation
  • aid in early Dx. and Tx. of preterm labor
  • assist with early mobilization
  • ? prevent thromboembolic complications.
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