Anesthetic Considerations for Women Having Surgery While Pregnant

Download Report

Transcript Anesthetic Considerations for Women Having Surgery While Pregnant

Anesthetic Considerations for
Women Having Surgery While
Pregnant
Alan. C. Santos, MD, MPH
St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital Center
New York, NY 10025
Contents
• Scope of the Problem
• Maternal Considerations (brief)
• Fetal Considerations
Teratogenicity
Obstetric Outcome
Long-Term Consequences?
• Nuts and Bolts
Scope of the Problem
• 0.3 to 2.2% of all pregnancies
• 87,000 in US and 115,000 in Europe
Am J OB/GYN 1980; 138:1167
Am J OB/GYN 1989; 161:1178
Breakdown by Trimester
100
First
80
Second
Third
60
%
40
20
0
Indications
• Gynecologic/Obstetric
circlage
torsion
• Other Abdominal Surgery
appendectomy
cholecystectomy
• Trauma
Maternal - Hemodynamics
• Increase in plasma volume
hemodilution - lower hematocrit
greater free fraction of drug
dilution of cholinesterase
• Increase CO/decrease SVR/±BP
• Aorta-caval compression
• Hypercoagulable state
Maternal - Respiratory
• Increase in minute ventilation
increase arterial oxygen tension
decrease in arterial carbon dioxide
Ph remains unchanged
• Decrease in FRC
• Increase in oxygen consumption
Maternal - Gastrointestinal
• Relaxation of gastroesophageal sphincter
heartburn
• Mechanical factors (growing uterus)
• Delayed gastric emptying
opioids
labor
Maternal – Induction Agents
CD50
Anesthesiology 1997;86:73
Anesth Analg 2001;93:1565
Maternal – MAC
Vol %
Anesthesiology 1994; 81:829
Anesthesiology 1996; 85:782
Maternal – Inhalational Agents
Anesthesiology 1994; 81:829
Maternal – Local Anesthetic Effect
Group
CSF
Progesterone ng.ml-1
Dermatomal Spread
Non-pregnant
0
T3-T11
1st Trimester
0.23
T3-T11
2nd Trimester
0.49
C8-T11
3rd Trimester
1.46
C7-T7
BJA 1995; 75:683
Maternal – Local Anesthetic Effect
• Epidural venous engorgement
• Reduced CSF volume
Fetal Risks
• Congenital Anomalies
• Spontaneous abortion/embryonic loss
• Premature labor
• Fetal demise
• Long term consequences???
Teratogenicity
• Structural (exposure day 15 – 55)
Congenital anomalies
Growth restriction
Enzyme deficiency
Resorptions/Death
• Behavioral (exposure late pregnancy)
Emotions
Learning
Adaptive
Teratogenicity
• Species Vulnerability
• Timing of Exposure
• Magnitude of Exposure
• Susceptibility/Genetic Predisposition
Teratogens
• Cocaine!
• Diazepam?
• Nitrous Oxide???
HOMOCYSTEINE
METHYLTERAHYDROFOLATE
Methionine
Synthetase
METHIONINE
TERAHYDROFOLATE
S-ADENOSYL
METHIONINE
ACTIVE FORMATE
FORMYLTETRAHYDROFOLATE
(FOLINIC ACID)
DEOXYURIDINE
DNA
THYMIDINE
METHYLENE
TETRAHYDROFOLATE
DIHYDROFOLATE
Nitrous Oxide Teratogenicity
• N2O 70% - fetal resorption/malformation
• N2O & Folinic – partial reversal
• N20 & Isoflurane – reversal
• N20 7 Pnenoxybenzamine - reversal
Preventing Nitrous Oxide Effects
• Limit exposure
• No benefit from folinic acid
• Combine with potent agent
CNS Growth and Development
• 2nd trimester to 2nd postnatal month:
major period of myelination
• 2nd and 3rd trimester:
neuronal proliferation and migration
region specific synaptogenesis
remodeling
• 80% of adult brain volume by age 2 years
Potential Anesthesia CNS Effects:
Cognitive:
Mechanisms:
Exposure
+ GABA
-NMDA
(+) Apoptosis
(-) Neurogenesis
∆ Cytoskeleton
∆ Dendritic spines
(-)Synapse
UNDEFINED?
CNS
Toxicity
IQ
psychomotor
memory, attention
Morbidity:
mental retardation
affective disorders
degenerative dis.
Mortality:
early death
Courtesy: Lena Sun
Early Exposure to Anesthetics
• ANIMALS: Sprague-Dawley rat pups day 7
• METHODS:
Control: DMSO
Study: 6 hour exposure to mock GA
N2O in oxygen
midazolam in DMSO
isoflurane
J Neurosci 2003; 23:876
Neuroapoptosis
Courtesy Lena Sun
Behavioral Effects
CNS Effects
• Atlanta Birth Defects Case-Control Database
• Infants born with major CNS defects
No anesthesia
General Anesthesia
Am J Public Health 1994; 84:1757
st
1
Trimester & CNS Effects
*
Anesthesia for Cesarean Delivery
and Learning Disabilities
• Deliveries in Olmsted County, 1976-1982
• Cohort review:
Vaginal Delivery
Cesarean Delivery – GEA
Cesarean Delivery – Regional
• Assessment of Learning
Anesthesiology 2009; 111:302
Cumulative Learning Disabilities
Isoflurane Exposure In Utero
• Animals:
Pregnant rats at day 14
• Methods:
Exposure to:
isoflurane in 100% oxygen
100% oxygen
• Results:
impaired spatial memory
reduced anxiety
Anesthesiology 2011; 114:521
Hyperoxia is also bad!
• J Neurosci 2008; 28:1236
• J Neurosci Res 2006; 84:306
• Cell Death Differ 2006; 13:1097
• Neurobiol Dis 2004; 17:273
What Are the Limitations?
• Species: Rats vs Lambs vs Humans
• Study Design: Retrospective
• Dose and Magnitude of Exposure
• Specificity: All Drugs Equal All the Time?
The Studies We Need
• Large scale, national studies
• Agents and exposure
• Timing
An Academic Exercise?
• Surgery during pregnancy is undertaken
only if absolutely necessary
• Mothers will require an anesthetic
is regional better than general?
• Children requiring surgery need anesthesia
Prevention
• Lithium
• Hypothermia
• Are some agents better than others
Any inhalational agent better:
desflurane-isoflurane-sevflurane?
• Animals:
Neonatal mice
• Methods:
Determine MAC in littermates
Study: 0.6 MAC for 6 H
Control: 6 h fast in RA
Euthanize – caspase-3 neurons
• Results:
No differences among the 3 agents
Anesthesiology 2011; 114;578
What Are the Important
Determinants of Fetal Outcome?
• Maternal Disease
• Site of Surgery
Obstetric
Pelvic
Abdominal
Peripheral
Reproductive Outcome After Anesthesia
and Surgery During Pregnancy
• All women delivering in Sweden 1973-1981
• Linked Registries:
Birth registry
Congenital Anomalies
Hospital Discharges
AJOG 1989; 161:1178
Results
• Deliveries
880,000
• Non-Ob Surgery
5,404
• Incidence
0.75%
Outcomes
*
*
Anesthetic Technique
When Is the Best Time?
TERATOGENICITY
PREMATURE LABOR
Appendectomy During Pregnancy
• All women delivering in Sweden 1973-1981
*appendectomy
• Linked Registries:
Birth registry
Congenital Anomalies
Hospital Discharges
Obstet Gynecol 1991; 77:835
Appendectomy During
Pregnancy
• Prior to 24 weeks – no effect
• Of women at 24 to 36 weeks delivered:
day of
16%
day after
5%
within 1 week
22%
Laparoscopy During Pregnancy
• Subjects: Women having abd/pelvic surgery
Sweden – 1973-1993
• Method: Linked registries:
Birth registry
Congenital Anomalies
Hospital Discharges
Am J OB/GYN 1997; 177:673
Obstetric Outcome
Relative Risk
Pregnant Patient
Elective Surgery
Delay until postpartum
Essential Surgery
1st trimester
Emergency Surgery
2nd/3rd trimester
If no minimal increased risk
to mother, consider delaying
until mid-gestation.
If greater than minimal
increased risk to mother,
proceed with surgery.
Proceed with optimal anesthetic for mother,
modified by considerations for maternal
physiologic changes and fetal well being.
Consider consulting a perinatologist or an
obstetrician.
Intraoperative and postoperative fetal and
uterine monitoring may be useful.
Nuts and Bolts (1)
• Timing as discussed
• Pre-anesthesia assessment:
surgical disease
co-morbidities
gestational age
risk of aspiration
physiologic alterations
fetal assessment
Nuts and Bolts (2)
• Prior to fetal viability:
confirmation of FHR by Doppler
• At fetal viability:
hospital that can manage obstetric issues
obstetrician to assume care
continuous fetal monitoring????
Nuts and Bolts (3)
• Second trimester on:
avoid aorta-caval compression
oxygenation and ventilation
maintain blood pressure
• Choice of Anesthesia
based on maternal condition
avoid hyperoxia
regional vs general??????
Nuts and Bolts (4)
• Post-operative care:
vigilance and monitoring
assess fetal status
assess/prevent/treat preterm labor
treat pain and discomfort aggressively