Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Emergencies in Obstetrics Paul C. Browne, M.D. Associate Professor Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology USC School of Medicine Disclosures Nature of Financial Relationship: •Grant/Research Support– •USC School of Medicine •March of Dimes Objectives • • • • • • • • • • 1. Define “Emergency 2. Triage for Pregnancy Emergencies 3. Maternal versus Fetal Emergencies 4. Change in Mental Status 5. Hemorrhage 6. Cardiac/Pulmonary Insufficiency 8. Trauma 9. Cardiac Arrest 10. Appropriate Maternal Evaluation 11. Appropriate Fetal Evaluation Definition of Emergency • “An emergency is the sudden onset of symptoms which, in the opinion of a reasonable and prudent lay person, require immediate medical attention and where lack of treatment would pose a significant health risk to the mother or her unborn child” Components of Emergency • Sudden onset • Symptoms which require immediate attention • Lack of treatment may cause harm • Mother and/or fetus Examples • Chronic bleeding • Acute bleeding • Sudden-onset is an emergency Courtesy mybloodyourblood.org Examples • Symptoms which require immediate attention • Preterm labor Courtesy activebodycare.co.uk Examples • Lack of Treatment may cause harm Courtesy topnews.in and statejournal.com Fetal Emergencies • • • • No Fetal Movement Vaginal Bleeding Preterm Labor Abdominal Trauma Viability • World Health Organization/ACOG – 20 weeks gestation – 350 Grams • State of South Carolina – Completion of “Second Trimester” • Your ER – 20 weeks gestation – Positive fetal heart rate Statement of AAP • Less than 23 weeks gestation – No mandate to resuscitate secondary to uniformly poor outcomes • 23-25 weeks – Resuscitation on a case by case basis in consultation with the parents and NICU professionals • Greater than 25 weeks – Ethical mandate for resuscitation in absence of an anomaly incompatible with life Maternal Emergencies Altered mental status Hemorrhage/DIC Cardiopulmonary insufficiency Trauma Cardiopulmonary arrest Change in Mental Status • Disorientation • Aphasia • Slurred Speech Causes of Altered Mental Status • Recreational Drugs • Hypotension (internal bleeding) • Diabetes • Seizure (post-ictal eclampsia) Triage of Altered Mental Status • Vital signs – Pulse, Blood Pressure • • • • • IV access Fingerstick glucose Urine drug screen Fetal heart rate by doppler Abbreviated EEG J Clin Neurophysiol. 2007 Feb;24(1):16-21 Mental Status Score Courtesy Scripps Mercy Hospital Triage of Altered Mental Status • Majority of cases will be caused by drug use or metabolic disturbance • Easily corrected in ER setting Altered Mental Status Triage • Hypoglycemia – Treat and release • Hypotension – Improved without bleeding • Seizure – Only with known seizure disorder Treatment • IV Hydration – D5LR at 125 ml/hr • Oxygen – 2 liters/minute nasal cannula • Serial Vital Signs • Serial Mental Status Checks • Monitor fetal status Recreational Drug Use • Observation admission – DHSS referral – Arrange outpatient drug rehab – Schedule birth defect screening Courtesy pregnancy.about.com Intracranial Hemorrhage • • • • Rare cause of altered mental status Lateralizing signs Often associated with seizures Source of medical-legal action Courtesy casereports.net and catscanman.net Pearls in management of altered mental status • Global neurological dysfunction – Drugs, metabolic disturbance, low BP • Focal neurological dysfunction – Seizure disorder, migraines, CVA • Parallel workups – Differential diagnosis evolves Summary-Altered Mental Status • • • • • • Usually corrected in ER Secure patient Start IVF with dextrose/give O2 Obtain labs/imaging Serial neuro checks until resolution Admit for substance abuse and eclampsia Hemorrhage • 2nd leading cause of maternal death • Unique physiology – Pregnant women are prepared to bleed • Increased blood volume • Increased blood clotting – Decompensate with rapid hemorrhage • Abruptio placenta • Severe trauma • Difficult cesarean section 2007 SC DHEC Vital Statistics Bleeding Courtesy thepregnancyzone.com Triage of Bleeding • Blood from vagina – Labor – Rupture of membranes – Abruption • Blood from anywhere else – Trauma – Epistaxis (nosebleed) – GI bleeding Vaginal Bleeding • First Thing – Confirm fetal heart rate • Important labs – Baseline hematocrit – Platelet Count – Fibrinogen – Drug screen • Sterile Speculum Exam – Locate source of bleeding • Ask the big question – Did you have sex within the past 24 hours? Blood from Anywhere Else • Stop the bleeding • Need consultants – Trauma surgeons, hematologists • Important labs – Baseline hematocrit – Platelet count – Work-up coagulopathy • Von Willebrand disease • Factor IX Deficiency Bleeding-What’s the Baseline? Hct > 30% Platelets >150,000 Fibinogen > 250 mg% Courtesy robetech.com Most likely incorrect diagnosis in Obstetrics? • DIC-Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation DIC versus Coagulopathy • DIC is a primary diagnosis • Coagulopathy occurs with – Excessive surgical blood loss – Amniotic fluid embolism – Prophylactic anti-coagulation – Pre-eclampsia – Sepsis Best Description • Coagulopathy – “any disorder of blood coagulation” • DIC – “a serious medical condition that develops when the normal balance between bleeding and clotting is disturbed” Thefreemedicaldictionary.com Skin manifestations of DIC Courtesy dermaamin.com Consumption versus DIC • Exhaustion of pro-coagulants from hemorrhage versus inappropriate depletion of pro-coagulants internally • Macro clotting versus microvascular clotting • At 2000-3000 ml, recovery time to replace lost pro-coagulants is exceeded Consumption-Abruption Courtesy cbbsweb.org DIC-Amniotic Fluid Embolism Courtesy brown.edu Treatment of DIC • Stop the inciting process – Sepsis – Surgical blood loss • Anticoagulation with heparin – Stop intravascular clotting • Recombinant Factor VIIa – Directly initiate thrombin formation at sites of abnormal bleeding Treatment of Coagulopathy • Replacement of whole blood – PRBC’s and Clotting factors • Replacement of clotting factors – FFP, dehydrated FFP (cryo) • Recombinant Factor VII/Fibrin glue – Rapid direct initiation of thrombin Emergency Release Blood • Whole Blood not available • Make Whole Blood from Packed RBC’s and Fresh Frozen Plasma • Order 2 units of each stat • Order 2 additional units of PRBC’s and FFP cross-matched Emergency Release Blood • Men-Opos PRBC’s • Women-Oneg PRBC’s • Both-ABpos FFP Palmetto Health Baptist Blood Bank Bleeding-What’s the Baseline? Hct > 30% Platelets >150,000 Fibinogen > 250 mg% Courtesy robetech.com Replacement • Plain IVF work well – Lactated Ringers – 0.5 normal saline • • • • PRBC/FFP is OK for emergency PRBC’s best for hemorrhage FFP at 1:1 units PRBC’s Platelets don’t usually help Factor viia • 80 patients with postpartum hemorrhage • 2.5% mortality • 95% effective • Majority of patients require 1 dose Ceska Gynecol 2010;75:297 Clin Obstet Gynecol 2010;53:219 Topical Hemostatics • Lattice frame for coagulation – Collagen – Potato starch • Fibrin glue Lattice for fibrin deposition Courtesy cardinal.com Lattice for fibrin deposition Courtesy policemag.com Fibrin Glue Courtesy laparoscopyhospital.com Treatment of Coagulopathy • Lattice material – Must have circulating anticoagulants for these to work – Ineffective in DIC • Replacement FFP and Factor VIIa – Correct the deficiency of pro-coagulants – Initiate thrombin formation at site of abnormal bleeding Summary-Coagulopathy • Not all bleeding disorders are DIC • Chicken versus the egg – Bleeding then coagulopathy (not DIC) – Coagulopathy then bleeding (DIC) • Most common clinical situation – Abruption – Difficult cesarean section • Treat with replacement and Factor VIIa Cardio-Pulmonary Insufficiency • Rare but serious emergency • Tachypnea/tachycardia combination • Presenting symptoms – SOB – Syncopal episode at home • Best question to ask – Orthopnea Symptoms Courtesy answerbag.com Causes of Cardiopulmonary Insufficiency • • • • • Fluid overload Pre-eclampsia Tocolysis Cardiomyopathy Pulmonary Embolism Triage of SOB/Syncope • Vital signs – Pulse, respiratory rate, BP • Oxygen saturation – Normal > 92% • Oxygen treatment – Cannula is usually sufficient – Humidity • IV access (Lactated Ringers) What makes Pregnant Women Unique? • Respiratory rate higher – Decrease TLC, FRC – Normal less than 26/minute • Pulse higher – Compensates for increased cardiac output – Often greater than 100/minute Helpful Laboratory Studies • Echocardiogram – Ejection fraction • Renal function tests • Not helpful – CXR • Typically shows cardiomegaly and poor pleural demarcation in bases – BNP • Always elevated – ABG • Rarely shows CO2 retention Cardiac Function Pulmonary Function Courtesy glowm.com Treatment for SOB • Diuresis – Lasix 10-20 mg IV • Fluid restriction • Oxygen • Sedatives – Morphine 5-10 mg IV – Xanax 0.25 mg po Cardio/Pulmonary Insufficiency • Automatic admission • Critical care if available • Lots of consults – OB, Cardiology, Pulmonary, Renal Remote Fetal Monitoring • Only if Viable • Protocol with OB nursing – Critical care should not be responsible Courtesy delphine.latte.com Summary-Cardio-Pulmonary Insufficiency • • • • • Elevate head Tilt pelvis Oxygen saturation monitoring EKG LISTEN! – Rales-Pulmonary Fluid Overload – Wheezes-Allergies or asthma Trauma • Usual causes – MVA – Fall – Domestic Violence • Unusual causes – Gunshot/Shotgun injury – Knife wound Trauma Courtesy centralnewyorkinjurylawyer.com Courtesy Volvo Courtesy howstuffworks.com Courtesy coloribus.com Trauma • Categorize Trauma – Blunt (most common) • Injury to abdomen • Injury to other areas (head, extremities) – Sharp (less common) • Injury to abdomen • Injury to other areas Doumentation • When OB was first contacted • When OB responded • When fetal cardiac activity was confirmed Laceration Repair • Verbal orders to ER physician • Local anesthesia – Lidocaine +/- epinephrine • Oral/IM antibiotic therapy • Acetominophen • Narcotics X-Rays Courtesy thestir.cafemom.com X-Rays • Always when medically indicated – Plain films have less exposure – CT scans without contrast – MRI may be best imaging • Appropriate to have permission – Disclaimers – Can’t do when unconscious – Establish next-of-kin Imaging Studies Courtesy University of Rochester Priority List • Head/Spine injury work-up – X-Rays/MRI, neuro checks – Poor anesthesia risk for delivery • Work-up for occult abdominal hemorrhage – Ruptured liver/spleen • Extremity injury Summary-Trauma • Fetus is rarely injured • Placenta is often injured • Litigation is frequent – Document fetal events – Document interactions with OB • Team approach is best • Have a plan for rapid transfer Courtesy babble.com Causes for arrest during pregnancy • • • • • • Trauma Pre-eclampsia Magnesium toxicity PE/Amniotic fluid embolism Anesthesia Cardiac disease – Marfan Syndrome Aortic Dissection – Acute coronary syndrome Why are Pregnant ER Patients Different? • Less Risky Behavior – Less Alcohol – Less Drugs/Medication • Less likely to be charged with an MVA – Drive with their children – Wear their seat belts • Less likely to settle disputes with violence – Suicide attempts are usually overdose – Don’t frequent clubs Survival from Cardiac Arrest • Out of hospital – 40% survival • In-hospital – 25% survival Arrest in Women • Arrest occurs 1/3 as often as in men • Lower incidence of ventricular fibrillation • Lower resuscitation rates after arrest (29 versus 32%) • Lower survival rates following resuscitation (11 versus 15%) Circulation 2001;104:2699 Arrest secondary to Anesthesia complications • 1990-2003 malpractice cases • 69 patient deaths or severe brain injuries alleged secondary to OB anesthesia • 18% OB cases versus 7% of non-OB cases related to airway problems Anesthesiaology 2009;110:131 Courtesy digital02.com What’s different doing CPR on pregnant women? • Left lateral decubitus position • Hands-only bystander • Airway and CPR for healthcare providers • Cesarean section in 5 minutes Courtesy AHA Year 2011 Citation Number Outcom of e Cases J Matern 2 0% Fetal Neo Med 2011 Isreal Med J 1 0% 2011 Anesthes Intensive Care 1 100% 2011 Transpla nt Proc 1 0% Courtesy medgadget.com Survival Survival Therapeutic Normothermia Hypothermia Australia 77 patients 49% 26% P<0.05 Europe 275 patients 55% 39% P<0.05 N Engl J Med 2010;363:1262 Summary Cardiac Arrest • Rare event during pregnancy • CPR must be adapted – LLD, rapid cesarean section • Poor chance for survival • Brain injury most significant sequela • Brain cooling for adults improves intact survival Transfer Questions?