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Surgical Complications of Pregnancy. Dr.Z Allameh MD. OBJECTIVES. Understand etiologies of common, non-obstetric surgical occurrences in the pregnant patient Review diagnosis modalities and techniques
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Surgical Complications of Pregnancy Dr.Z Allameh MD
OBJECTIVES • Understand etiologies of common, non-obstetric surgical occurrences in the pregnant patient • Review diagnosis modalities and techniques • Address risks/benefits of intervention with regard to gestational age and maternal/fetal physiology • Discuss operative/anesthesia techniques most well suited • Review literature based outcomes/data
Non-Obstetric Causes for Surgery • Appendicitis • Biliary disease • Ovarian disorders • Breast disease • Cervical disease • Bowel obstruction
Rate of non-obstetric surgery Rate – 1:527 pregnancies, 77 surgeries total
Appendicitis • 1:2000 to 1:6000 pregnancies • Incidence 0.05% • Difficult diagnosis?? • Immediate intervention a must
Pathogenesis: • Appendiceal lumen obstruction: • Fecaliths • Parasites • Foreign bodies • Lymphoid hyperplasia • Metastatic cancer
Occurrence • Retrospective studies (1990 UCLA, 1995 Good Sam, Phoenix) • 151 patients • No significant change in occurrence between trimesters • (Tamir 1990, Mourad 2000)
Sometimes difficult in Pregnancy! Displaced appendix? Distorted lab values Vague Symptoms Fever? Tachycardia? Diagnosis
Appendix Location • 1932 Baer described location of appendix during pregnancy. • Since, most agree there is a shift in location.
Appendix location • Iran Study 1999 • 291 patients R.A. • 3 groups • 165 preg. Elective C/S • 26 preg. With Appendicitis • 100 N.P. R.A. with Appendicitis • No sig difference!! (H. Hodjati,* T. Kazerooi, 2002)
Similar Study • Year 2000 • Mourad and associates reported 80% of 45 patients studied to have RLQ pain. • …..consistent with Study in Iran
Normal Pregnancy Abdominal tenderness Nausea Vomiting Anorexia Acute Appendicitis Abdominal tenderness Nausea Vomiting Anorexia Symptoms
Symptoms cont…. • 1975 Study Parkland: 34 pts over 15 years. • Direct abdominal tenderness is rarely absent. • Rebound tenderness 55-75% • Rectal tenderness, especially 1st trimester • Anorexia in only 1/3-2/3 pts, vs. almost 100% non pregnant. • (Cunningham 1975)
Lab Values • WBC often as high as 15,000/mm3 in normal pregnancy. Bailey et. Al 1973-83 41 cases of acute appendicitis in pregnancy 57% accurate initial diagnosis based on P.E., labs, & Sx. Mazze and Kallen 1991 778 cases with 65% accurate diagnosis Sharp 1994 -50% accuracy reported
Can we do better than 50%? • CT Scan • Numerous reports in surgical literature suggesting accuracy of >97% in non-pregnant patients.
CT scan cont…. • Teratogenicity • Hiroshima • Studied 45 years later • Perinatal exposure • No evidence of mental retardation or microcephaly if exposed before 8 or after 25 WGA • Highest risk (12 Rads at 8-15 weeks, 21 rads at 16-25 weeks).
Teratogenicity, cont…. • *No evidence of any increased risk with exposure of up to 5 Rads. • Maximal risk at 1 rad is 0.003% • 15% embryos naturally abort • 2.7-3.0% have genetic malformations • 4% IUGR • 8-10% late onset genetic abnormalities ( • (Brent RL 1989)
Ultrasound • 1992 Study • 45 pts, suspected Appendicitis • Diagnosis missed in 7% of cases due to gravid uterus (all in 3rd trimester) • 42 cases +, 100% sensitivity • 96% specificity • 98% accuracy (2 similar studies support findings) (Lim HK; Bae SH 1992)
Risks if untreated • Preterm contractions/labor • Rupture leading to peritonitis • Sepsis • Fetal tachycardia • Maternal/fetal death
Risks cont…. • Increased Gest age = increased complication rate • Uterine contractions – as high as 80% of pts >24 WGA • Appendiceal perforation • 4-19% non-pregnant patients • 57% pregnant patients • (Innability to isolate infection by omentum) (Am Sur 2000 Jun: 66)
“The mortality of appendicitis complicating pregnancy is the mortality of delay”Babler 1908
Treatment • Suspicion: • Immediate surgery • Delay • Generalized peritonits • Antibiotics • Perioperative 2nd cephalosporin. May be discontinued post-op, minus perforation, gangrene or phlegmon
Laparoscopy • Safe – especially in the first 20 weeks • (Reedy et al. 1997) • Risks: • Low birth weight infants • Preterm labor • Fetal growth restriction (no diff. Vs. laparotomy) (Mazze and Kallen 1989)
Mazze and Kallen • 5405 pregnant women undergoing surgery 1973-1981 • 41% 1st • 35% 2nd • 24% 3rd • 16% Laparascopic 54% General anesthesia • Increased risk of: • Death by 7 days 1.4 – 3.2 – 1.9 (2.1) • Birthweight <1500 gms 1.7 – 3.2 – 1.5 (2.2) • Birthweight <2500 gms 1.4 – 1.8 – 2.2 – (2.0) • (No increased risk of stillborn or congenital malformation)
Anesthesia • General anesthesia considered safe • However…… • Kallen and Mazze 1990 • Sylvester et al 1994 • ..both raised questions about potentially increased risk of neural tube defects and hydrocephaly when general anesthesia is used in first trimester
Other Risks • Pneumoperitoneum • Animal studies indicate decreased unteroplacental blood flow with CO2 pressures >15mmHg • Also, some infants developed acidemia • Barnard et al 1995 • Hunter et al 1995
0.05% of pregnancies Detailed P.E. – may be ambiguous Ultrasound may be helpful if prompt Do not delay diagnosis Consult Surgery immediately Perioperative ABX General Anesthesia acceptable No sig. Diff in morbidity/mortality with Laparascopy vs laparotomy Extended monitoring for labor pattern necessary post operatively. Appendectomy Review
ACOG • Prophylactic Appendectomy • Slight risk associated with procedure. • Slight benefit in prophylaxis removal. • Should perform in certain groups: • 10-30 yr. Age group undergoing dx. Lap for pelvic pain • Mentally handicapped • Pts. With multiple adhesions
Gall Bladder • Biliary Disease • Increased biliary sludge in pregnancy • Increased bile viscosity • Increased micelles • Gall bladder relaxation • Increased risk of gallstone formation • Cholelithiasis cause of 90% cases of cystitis • 0.2-0.5/1000 pregnancies require surgery (Landers eta ak 1987)
Symptoms • May be asymptomatic • 2.5-10% of pregnant patients • (Maringhini et al 1987) • RUQ Pain – most reliable symptom • (pain may radiate to back) • Vomiting approx 50% • Can mimic appendicitis in 3rd trimester
Workup • Ultrasound • Effective rate 90% • Liver enzymes • Amylase, Lipase • CBC
Management • Several studies – Conservative vs. Surgical • Landers et al 1987 • Glasgow et al 1998 • Dixon et al 1987 • 15-50% of pts treated medically reported continued symptoms throughout pregnancy.
Mgmt. cont… • Davis et al 2000 • 77 cases • Primary surgical management • Reported better outcomes with surgical management • Less risk to fetus if performed in 2nd trimester
Individual Based • No solid consensus on management • If Medically treated • Demerol over morphine for pain • IVF • NG suction • Low fat diet • Asymptomatic Stones- surgery not recommended
Laparascopic approach safe, generally to 3rd trimester Remember M/F Risks Slight increase of low birth weights Slight increase of infant death within 7 days Increase in contractions, especially >24 weeks Surgical Management
Pancreatitis • 1:3000 – 1:4000 pregnancies • High incidence of Gallstones • Elevated Amylase, Lipase • Medical management • NG tube • NPO • IVF, Pain control • Parkland Study 1995 • 43 patients, all tx. medically • All did well – Avg stay 8 days (Ramin eta al 1995)
The Adnexa • Estimated 1:200 deliveries (adnexal masses) • Based on two studies • Katz 1993 • Koonings 1988 • Est. 1:1300 adnexal masses require surgery • Whitecar 1999
Adnexal Masses Cont… • 1990 Study • Whitecar 1990 • 130 pregnancies • 5% malignant rate • ½ Serous Carcinomas of low malignant potential • 30% cystic teratomas • 28% serous/mucinous cystadenomas • 13% corpus luteal • 7% benign
Adnexal Masses cont…. • 2 additional studies support percentages: • Sunoo 1990 • Hopkins 1986 • 1/3 Teratomas • 1/3 Cystadenomas
Complications • Whitecar study cont.. • Ovarian Torsion • most common and serious sequelae • 5% occurrence • rupture most common in 1st trimester
Multiple Studies Thornton 1987 Whitecar 1999 Fleischer 1990 Caspi 2000 Hess 1988 Platek 1995 Parker 1996 Best Approach: (<5cm) Exp. Mgmt (5-10cm) Watch unless complex on sonography If >6cm after 16 WGA, operate Management
Williams Obstetrics Concludes: • 1. What is the mass and is it malignant? • 2. Is there a good likelihood that the mass will regress? • 3. Will the mass result in dystocia and/or torsion and possible rupture?
MRI? • 1990 Kier et al • Correctly identified 17 of 17 adnexal masses with MRI vs. 12 out of 17 with ultrasound
“No single diagnostic procedure results in a radiation dose that threatens the well-being of the developing embryo and fetus.” American College of RadiologyHowever, the National Radiological Protection Board arbitrarily advises against the use of MRI in the first trimester. (Garden, 1991)
Trauma • Affects approx. 7% of pregnant women • Indications for Surgical Exploration: • Penetrating abdominal injury • Clinical evidence of intraperitoneal hemorrhage • Suspected Bowel Perforation • Suspected injury to uterus or fetus
Breast Disease • “Any suspicious breast mass found during pregnancy should prompt an aggressive plan to determine its cause, whether by FNA or open biopsy.” • Williams 21st Edition