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Normal changes in pregnancy

Normal changes in pregnancy . D r. S. Parthasarathy MD., DA., DNB, MD ( Acu ), Dip. Diab . DCA, Dip. Software statistics PhD ( physio ) Mahatma Gandhi Medical college and research institute , puducherry India . Big B confirms that Aish is pregnant .

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Normal changes in pregnancy

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  1. Normal changes in pregnancy Dr. S. Parthasarathy MD., DA., DNB, MD (Acu), Dip. Diab. DCA, Dip. Software statistics PhD (physio) Mahatma Gandhi Medical college and research institute , puducherry India

  2. Big B confirms that Aish is pregnant

  3. When the whole world turns an eye on changes of pregnancy why not anesthesiologists ??

  4. Maternal physiology – what to know and why? • The baby comes in utero • It has to get accommodated • It has to get nutrients • It has to grow • Hence many changes have to take place

  5. Systems involved • Cardiovascular • Respiratory • CNS • Head, eyes, ent • GIT • Renal • Haemotolgic • Endocrine • Musculoskeletal • weight increase 12 kg

  6. Cardiovascular

  7. Cardiovascular • TBW increases from 6.5L to 8.5L • starts 5- 6 weeks • Pregnancy is a condition of chronic volume overload • Water retention exceeds Na retention- • decreased plasma osmolality

  8. CVS • Cardiac output starts to increase from 8 weeks • Both HR and SV increase • Labour CO upto 7 – 10 litres • First, it facilitates maternal and fetal exchanges of respiratory gases, nutrients and metabolites. Second, it reduces the impact of maternal blood loss at delivery.

  9. Haemodynamic changes • Systolic BP – no change • Diastolic BP – decrease • Heart rate – 20 % increase • Cardiac output – 30 - 40 % increase • Cvp & PCWP -- no change • SVR - 1200 dyne / cm / sec 20 % decrease • PVR – 80 dyne / cm / sec 30 % decrease

  10. CO , SVR and BP CO X SVR = BP Increase decrease no change SV ↑ vaso dilation HR ↑ placenta

  11. Diastolic BP • In fact due to vasodilation • Diastolic BP may fall

  12. Haemodynamic changes – ctd. • Blood volume increased • More blood • Vasodilation and more space for it to hold • So CVP and PCWP --- no change

  13. Distribution of CO • First trimester and non-pregnant state • Uterus receives 2-3% • By term • Uterus receives 17% • Breasts 2% • Reduction of the fraction of CO going to the splanchnic bed and skeletal muscle • CO to the kidneys, skin, brain and coronary arteries does not change

  14. In patients with heart disease • For the gravida with heart disease and low cardiac reserve, the increase in the work of the heart may cause ventricular failure and pulmonary oedema • Effective pain relief in such patient (epidural)

  15. CO increase __ ?? • Epidural analgesia – • Cardiac output ?? • Lower when supine • IVC compression by the uterus reduces venous return to the heart • Postpartum ?? • Hemodynamic changes return after 2 – 4 weeks after delivery.

  16. Wedge and supine hypotension

  17. Auscultation • increased splitting of the first and second heart sound • S3 gallop • SEM along the left sternal border • Continuous murmurs

  18. Investigations • CXR • straightening of left heart border • heart position more horizontal – may appear as cardiomegaly • increased vascular markings in lungs • ECG • left axis deviation • non-specific ST-T wave changes

  19. Echo • left ventricular hypertrophy • 94% of term pregnant women exhibit tricuspid and pulmonic regurgitation, and 27% exhibit mitral regurgitation

  20. Respiratory system • UPPER RESPIRATORY TRACT • Hyperemic mucosa of nasopharynx • Estrogen-mediated • nasal stuffiness and epistaxis • Polyposis of nose and sinuses may occur and regress after delivery • “chronic cold”

  21. Airway • Airway edema and difficult intubation • Weight gain and large breasts may hamper mask ventilation • Size of ET tube ?? • Bleeding • Mallampatti classification in pregnancy • Class 4 42 % ---- 56 % • Class 3 36 % ----- 29 % • Class 2 14 % ----- 10 % • Class 1 8% ----- 5 %

  22. Thoracic cage becomes rounder and more AP diameter

  23. Changes of rib cage and expanding uterus • TLC ↓ 5 % • FRC ↓ 20 • VC – no change • TV - ↑ • Decrease FRC – less oxygen reserve • oxygen consumption increases by 30% to 40% during pregnancy • Desaturate at 150 mm Hg / min

  24. PFT

  25. Respiratory muscles • No change in strength • By 8 weeks progesterone increase – • central drive increase • TV increase • MV increase • RR same

  26. ABG • Increased MV • wash out CO2 • Increase PO2 • PaO2 – 105 and PCO2 to 30 mmHg • But pH is normal • Kidneys excrete bicarb ---25 – 20 mEq/l

  27. The increased minute ventilation combined with decreased functional residual capacity hastens inhalation induction or changes in depth of anaesthesia when breathing spontaneously

  28. Central nervous system • Neuro changes are subtle • Elevated pain threshold • Tolerate pain better How ? • Increased spinal dynorphin • Upregulation of descending inhibition • Why ? • Withstand labour pain better

  29. Local anaesthetics • Local anaesthetics • Decreased dose • There is a 30% reduction in volume of local anaesthetic solution required at term when compared to the non-pregnant woman, to achieve the same block. • CSF protein ↓ • CSF pH ↑

  30. MAC and pregnancy • There is a reduction in anaesthetic requirements, with a fall in the minimum alveolar concentrations (MAC) of halogenated vapors. • MAC 25-40% lower in gravid as compared with nonpregnant.

  31. GI tract - Appetite • Increased apetite • Pica • Sense of taste may be blunted

  32. Gastrointestinal - • Gallbladder • Slower rate of emptying • increased risk gallstone formation • NAUSEA AND VOMITING • Morning sickness complicates 70% of pregnancies • Onset 4-8 weeks up to 14-16 weeks • Cause? • Relaxation of smooth muscle of stomach, elevated levels of steroids and hCG

  33. Scoline • Serum cholinesterase levels fall by 24-28% during the first trimester • However, even lower levels (about 33% reduction) develop during the first 7 postpartum days. • Usually suxa ok in normal pregnant persons

  34. NONDEPOLARIZING MUSCLE RELAXANTS •   Increased sensitivity to vecuronium and rocuronium • Elimination half-life of vecuronium and pancuronium shortened    • Atracuriumpharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics unaltered

  35. No alcohol item but still hangover

  36. GIT • GE sphincter tone down • Gastric emptying time ? Altered • Volume and acidity – no change • Consider as full stomach !! • Liver blood flow unchanged • Portal compression – varices and • Perianalhaemorhoids – more common

  37. Renal ANATOMY • Kidney enlargement • increased renal vascular and interstitial volume, R>L • Ureteral and renal pelvis dilatation by 8 weeks • mechanical compression by uterus and ovarian venous plexus • smooth muscle relaxation by progesterone • Increased incidence of pyelonephritis • Possible glycosuria

  38. Effective renal plasma flow (ERPF) and GFR increase • Pregnant nonpregnant • Urea - 2 – 2.5 mmol/l 6-7 • Creatinine 50 mic.mol/l (0.6) 100 • Uric acid 0.2 0.35 • So in intrepretation of lab. Values – beware

  39. Renal • Greater ADH production • Increased vasopressinase enzyme • Increased renal tubular resorption and sodium retention • Sodium excretion normal

  40. Haematological • Anemia of pregnancy blood volume increases by up to 45% Red cell volume increases by only 30%. This differential increase leads to the “physiologic anemia” of pregnancy

  41. Hematopoiesis outstrips iron supply • Iron supplements necessary • physiologic anemia of pregnancy • may function to decrease blood viscosity • may improve intervillous perfusion?

  42. Blood cells • Dilution of plasma causes reduction of antibody titres • Reduction of leucocytechemotaxis • Autoimmune diseases better in pregnancy !! • WBC count is normal but may raise in labour

  43. Coagulation • Platelets immature • Chronic low grade DIC ---consumptive coagulopathy – immature platelets • All coagulation factors are increased - ↑ estrogen and progestogen • Thrombo embolic complications 5 times more common but BT and CT are normal • ESR and CRP elevated

  44. Endocrine • Pregnancy is a diabetogenic state • Insulin resistance and higher ABG levels • Pregnant – more prone for ketosis in fasting state • The normal pregnant woman is euthyroid • Free T 4 is the best test

  45. Endocrine • Plasma corticosteroid-binding globulin (CBG) rises • due to enhanced liver synthesis • Free plasma cortisol rises • increased production and delayed clearance • DHEAS (dehydroepiandrosterone) decreases • Testosterone is slightly elevated • Increased SHBG and androstenedione

  46. SKIN • Spider angiomata (face, upper chest, and arm) and palmarerythema • elevated estrogen levels • both regress after delivery • Striaegravidarum • Hyperpigmentation • Melasma: “mask of pregnancy” • Increased eccrine sweating and sebum excretion

  47. Increased thickness of cornea due to fluid retention (contact lens intolerance) • Decreased intraocular pressure • Eye changes are not like this!!

  48. Skeleton • Lordosis • keep center of gravity over the legs • back pain… • Relaxin • relaxation of the pubic symphysis and sacroiliac joints • facilitates vaginal delivery but may lead to discomfort • Implications • unsteadiness of gait and trauma from falls

  49. Placenta • keeping maternal blood levels of drugs low • Less drug reaches the fetus. • since 75% of the blood in the umbilical vein travels to the liver, a large portion of drug can be metabolized before reaching vital fetal organs • What happens in fetal distress ??

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