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Myometrial Injection of Vasopressin. Verna Thomas, BSN, SRNA. Objectives. Familiarize learner with myomectomy procedure and management options Describe anesthetic c onsiderations for myomectomy Identify purpose for use of vasopressin and mechanism of action
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Myometrial Injection of Vasopressin Verna Thomas, BSN, SRNA
Objectives • Familiarize learner with myomectomy procedure and management options • Describe anesthetic considerations for myomectomy • Identify purpose for use of vasopressin and mechanism of action • Recognize potential complications associated with use of vasopressin • Engage the learner in a spirited discussion regarding a case of myometrial vasopressin injection
Case of Interest • 29 y/o AA Female, • 67 kg • ASA 2, MP II • Employed RN • History of uterine fibroid, syncope at work, received cardiac work-up, anemic • Robotic Assisted Laparoscopic Myomectomy
Myomectomy • Define most common benign tumor of the uterus in women of reproductive age • Prevalence clinically diagnosed in 25% of women with a predicted incidence of 75% • Rationale myomectomy versus hysterectomy to preserve fertility • Population predominance amongst African American women of child-bearing age to ~ 50y
Management Options • Uterine Artery Embolization
Management Options • Laparoscopic Assisted Abdominal Myomectomy (LAAM) • Laparoscopic Myomectomy (Standard)
Anesthesia Considerations • Bleeding • Hemodynamic Alteration • Respiratory Compromise • Positioning
Case Update #1 • Standard Induction • Trocars/Insufflation • Vasopressin Injection • Re-insufflation
Synthetic Vasopressin in Myomectomy • Control bleeding • Potent vasoconstrictor • 20U/ml diluted in 100-200ml of NSS • Max injection 3-5U • Anesthesia should be notified before injection • Aspirate before injection • 15-25 min half-life
Medical Templates 2003 Template 8 20 units in 200ml NS Max 3-5 units
Case Update #2 • Robotic Assisted Laparoscopic Myomectomy • Approximately 45-60 min into the case • Incision through serosa • BP cuff cycling every 3 minutes
Differential Diagnosis • Venous Air Embolism (VAE) • Subatmospheric pressure w/i an open vein • Decreased EtCO2, desaturation, sudden hypotension • TEE, precordial Doppler sonography • Pulmonary Embolus • Entry of blood clots, fat, tumor cells, air, amniotic fluid, or foreign material into venous system • sudden cardiovascular collapse, hypoxemia, bronchospasm, decreased ETCO2, elevated CVP and PAP • TEE; may not reveal the embolus but will show R. heart distension and dysfunction • MI • No preoperative comorbidities • HoTN, bradycardia, no detectable ECG changes • TEE; more sensitive indicator of MI than ECG • Hemorrhage
Case Update #3 • Weak/thready carotid pulse • Absent radial pulses • PEA w/ACLS • Central line placement • Swan ganz placement • Milrinone and Epinepherine infusion • Pulmonary Edema • Lasix • Refractory hypoxemia
Case Conclusion • Prepped for ECMO • Heparinized • Near Complete Resolution • Balloon Pump • Following Commands • Pressors and balloon pump discontinued • Discharged from hospital POD 8
What Did We Learn Vigilance • Never deviate from standard of care • Treated the BP • Notified the surgeon and called for help • Rapid assessment and treatment/supportive care