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Anesthesia for the Pregnant Patient Undergoing Nonobstetric Surgery. R4 오 재 열. surgery during pregnancy 2% of pregnant women/year, involving 75,000 anesthetics. Trauma, ovarian cysts, appendicitis, breast tumors, cervical incompetence … Several unique problems
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Anesthesia for the Pregnant Patient Undergoing Nonobstetric Surgery R4 오 재 열
surgery during pregnancy • 2% of pregnant women/year, involving 75,000 anesthetics. • Trauma, ovarian cysts, appendicitis, breast tumors, cervical incompetence… • Several unique problems • alterations in maternal physiology. • possible teratogenic effects of anesthetic agents. • maintenance of uterine perfusion and effects of anesthetic interventions on the fetus. • prevention of premature labor, the highest cause of fetal loss.
Increase in cardiac output and blood volume • 30-40% higher by 28 weeks(begin 1st trimester). • Susceptible to hypotension. • d/t aortocaval compression in the supine position. • Fetal compromise even in the asymptomatic mother.
Respiratory change • decrease in functional residual capacity(FRC). • Begin 2nd trimester, 20% decrease in FRC, 20% increase in oxygen consumption. • Airway closure during normal tidal ventilation in the supine position. • Predispose to rapid falls in PaO2 during periods of apnea or airway obstruction. • minute ventilation increases(50% at term). • Capillary engorgement throughout the respiratory tract. • trauma during placement of airways and gastric tubes. • Smaller sized tube, avoid nasal intubation or nasogastric tubes.
Increased risk of aspiration • Increase the level of gastrin, progesterone. • Enlarged uterus • displace pylorus, alters the function of G-E junction. • Heartburn • indicates a lower pressure gradient across the G-E junction. • Preoperative aspiration prophylaxis • nonparticulate antacid, H2 blocker, metoclopramide.
Neurologic changes • a 25-40% decrease in MAC for inhalational anesthetics. • A 30% decrease in dosage requirement for local anesthetics in the epidural and subarachnoid spaces. • Maternal hyperventilation with alkalosis. • a left-ward shift of the oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve. • Increasing maternal affinity for oxygen and decreasing release to the fetus. • Positive pressure ventilation • 25% fall in uterine blood flow.
Factors affecting the potential teratogenecity of of a drug. • timing of administration. • individual sensitivity to the agent. • The threshold or amount of exposure. • The naturally occurring incidence of congenital anomalies.
The day 15 to 90 of gestation • organogenesis is occurring. • Most vulnerable to teratogenic effects, susceptibility to teratogenic agents is highest. • After 13 weeks, organogenesis is complete. • growth retardation or functional effects rather than structural defects.
Medical and social factors • Diabetic mothers • 4-12% incidence of major congenital anomalies. • Use of cocaine and heroin • associated with microcephaly and other abnormalities of brain developments. • paternal exposure to drugs • cocaine • binds to sperm, enter the ovum at the time of conception. • Increased incidence of congenital anomalies.
Small Animal Studies • Problems • variability in drug-induced teratogenic effects among species. • In animal studies, investigators does not monitor or control closely. • does not simulate usual operating room. • But doing comparable studies in humans require exposure of large numbers of pregnant woman.
Animal studies have indicated the safety of several drugs. • Morphine, fentanyl, sufentanil, alfentanil. • Thiopental, methohexital, etomidate, ketamine. • Halothane, enflurane, isoflurane • not teratogenic in 0.75% MAC doses. • lidocaine : 500 mg/kg/day. • Benzodiazepine drugs • 1975, increased exposure to diazepam in women whose infants had a cleft lip anomaly was reported. • package inserts, “ an increased risk of congenital malformations associated with the use of benzodiazepine drugs has been suggested in several studies.”
Nitrous Oxide • Inactivates Vitamine B12, inhibit methionine synthetase, affecting production of DNA precursors. • Reduction of methionine synthetase activity interferes with folate metabolism. • give folate preoperatively to pregnant women undergoing general anesthesia. • A reduction in neural-tube defects when folic acid supplementation is given. • Nitrous oxide enhances adrenergic tone and causes vasoconstriction. • halogenated agents(halothane and isoflurane) • attenuate enhanced adrenergic tones, preserving uterine blood flow. • Anomalies and resorptions are prevented.
Occupational Exposure studies • The personnel chronically exposed to low levels of anesthetic gases. • an increase in the incidence of spontaneous abortion and congenital anomalies. • Methodologic weakness • recall bias, confounding variables. • Control these variables • no increased rate of abortion, no decrease in birth weight, no increase in congenital anomalies, and no increase in perinatal mortality.
Studies on Outcome after Surgery during Pregnancy • A consistent increase in fetal mortality because of preterm labor with delivery of a previable fetus. • Canada (1971-1978) • no increase in conganital anomalies, an increased risk of spontaneous abortion in women in the first or second trimester. • No increased risk of abortion for those receiving no anesthetic, spinal anesthesia, or local anesthetics. • Surgical procedure had a significant effect.
Sweden(1973-1981) • the incidence of low-birth weight infants(less than 1500g) and perinatal death was increased. • The illness played a significant role in determining the outcome. • Intra-abdominal, pelvic, and uterine pathology pose the highest risk to the pregnancy. • Summary • No anesthetic agent except cocaine has been shown to be teratogenic in humans. • Hypoxia, hypercarbia, and hypotension contributing to decreased uterine perfusion are capable of inducing malformations and even causing fetal death at any stage of gestation
Preoperative Assessment • All patient of child-bearing age should be questioned about the possibility of being pregnant. • If possible, elective surgery should be delayed. • lower risk of preterm labor and delivery if surgery is done in the second trimester. • Risks to the fetus and possible loss of the pregnancy should be discussed by the anesthesiologist and surgeon. • The patient should be assured of the low risk of direct harm to the fetus by anesthetic drugs or techniques.
Premedication • narcotics or barbiturates. • Antisialagogue : glycopyrrolate(no central effects to mother). • Aspiration prophylaxis • Careful evaluation of the airway • Prophylactic tocolysis • indomethacin suppositories. • Beta-agonist or magnesium sulfate • The patient should be educated on symptoms of premature labor. • Remain on her side during transport.
Intraoperative Management • Hypoglycemia shold be avoided. • An external Doppler device and tocodynamometer • to monitor fetal heart rate and uterine contractions. • Should be used after 20 weeks gestation. • Hypoxia • the most common teratogen and cause of fetal distress during surgery. • Decelerations : inadequate uterine perfusion. • Induced hypotension or CPB • the fetus is excellent monitor to assess the adequacy of maternal perfusion.
Safe anesthetic management is more important than the particular agent or technique used. • Avoid hypotension and hypoxia. • Preoxygenation before general ansthesia. • to prevent rapid desaturation • A rapid sequence induction with cricoid pressure. • decrease the risk of aspiration.
Induction agents • thiopental and etomidate • Propofol • Ketamine • a dose less than 2 mg/kg during early gestation. • Inhalational agents • decrease uterine tone and inhibit contractions. • At levels above 2.0 MAC, decrease maternal blood pressure and cardiac output, leading to fetal acidosis. • Nitrous oxide • adverse effects were reversed with the addition of inhalational agents. • Reversal agent • Not cross placenta.
Regional anesthesia • minimal drug exposure to the fetus. • No change in fetal heart rate variability. • Avoid hypotension : fluid preloading, left uterine displacement. • Drug requirements are decreased during pregnancy. • Ephedrine : preserves uterine blood flow, preferred pressor.
Postoperative Care • In the recovery room, continue monitoring fetal heart rate and uterine activity. • should be continued for at last 24 hours. • Postoperative pain management • epidural or intrathecal narcotics. • NSAIDs : avoid after 32 weeks gestation.
Postoperative pulmonary edema or ARDS(risk factors) • gestational age older than 20 weeks. • Preoperative respiratory rate more than 24 breaths/min. • Preoperative temperature higher than 100.4 F. • A fluid load (I >O) of more than 4 L in the first 48 hours. • Concomitant tocolytic use.
Trauma • No. 1 cause of maternal death. • Fetal loss d/t maternal death or placental abruption. • Early ultrasound • Indications for an emergent c-sec. • a stable mother with a viable fetus in distress. • Traumatic uterine rupture. • Gravid uterus interfering with intra-abdominal repairs in the mother. • A mother who is unsalvageable and a viable fetus. • If the fetus is previable or dead, focus on optimizing the mother.
Neurosurgery • Intracranial aneurysms and AV malformations. • Induced hypotension • Reduces uterine perfusion. • Require fetal monitoring. • Hyperventilation • reduces maternal cardiac output. • High doses of mannitol • causes fetal dehydration.
Fetal surgery • Postoperative preterm labor • the biggest problem • Tocolysis • preoperative indomethacin, intraoperative and postoperative magnesium sulfate. • High doses of inhalational agents. • for maternal and fetal anesthesia. • For uterine relaxation during surgery.
Laparoscopy • Used as a diagnostic tool to avoid unnecessary laparotomy. • CO2 pneumoperitoneum • does not cause fetal hemodynamic changes, but induces a fetal respiratory acidosis. • Maintain intra-abdominal pressure as low as possible. • Use N2O instead of CO2 as the insufflating gas. • Fetal shielding during cholangiograms, intraoperative fetal monitoring, pneumatic stockings, left lateral table rotation, an open technique for trocar placement.
Conclusions • Pregnant patient undergoing surgery must be approached with caution and respect, but not fear. • Anesthetic agents have an extremely low or nonexistent risk of teratogenecity. • Most important variable for surgery during pregnancy is safe skilled anesthetic management.