| Literature DB >> 25018678 |
J M Afolayan1, T O Olajumoke2, S E Esangbedo3, N P Edomwonyi3.
Abstract
Residents' competency-based training and multidisciplinary cooperation are needed for rapid sequence spinal anaesthesia for fetal distress. Multiple standard but 'crash' spinal anaesthesia for non-obstetric procedures is imperative for acquisition of experienced hands. The purpose of this review is to share our modest experiences in the use of rapid spinal anaesthesia for emergency Caesarean delivery in pregnant women complicated with fetal distress. Fetal distress diagnosis is made promtly, intravenous line put in place in labour ward. Pre-loading or not, one-touch, non-touch spinal technique prevents unnecessary delay and further fetal hypoxic injury. Spinal pack is on stand by in the operating room at all time. Preloading is possible during the waiting period for other care providers otherwise coloading is used. A single wipe of the back with chlorhexidine lotion is frequently used for scrubbing. Lidocaine infiltration or spay is essential and does not waste time but opioid as adjuvant to bupivacaine wastes a lot of time to constitute and measure. So, opioid should be avoided. Average of 2.5 ml of 0.5% hyperbaric bupivacaine is frequently used in our centres. Surgery starts almost immediately after cleaning and drapping of the patient by the obstetrician. Ephedrine is made handy and constituted in case there is hypotension which fluid alone cannot treat.Entities:
Keywords: Emergency caesarean section; fetal distress; spinal anaesthesia
Year: 2014 PMID: 25018678 PMCID: PMC4092077
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Biomed Sci ISSN: 1550-9702
Categorisation of urgency of Caesarean Section (3)
| Grade | Definition (at time of decision to operate) |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Category 1 | Immediate threat to life of woman or fetus |
| Category 2 | Maternal or fetal compromise, not immediately life-threatening |
| Category 3 | Needing early delivery but no maternal or fetal compromise |
| Category 4 | At a time to suit the woman and maternal team. |
Diagnostic markers of fetal distress
| Pattern | Markers |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Reassuring (close monitoring) | • Mild variable deceleration |
| • Early deceleration | |
| • Acceleration | |
| • Bradycardia (100-120 bpm) | |
| Non-reassuring (resuscitation is needed) | • Tarchycardia |
| • Bradycardia (80 to 100 bpm) | |
| • Saltatory Variability (>25 bpm) | |
| • Decrease in baseline Variability | |
| Ominous (Immediate delivery) | • Persistent late deceleration with loss of beat to beat variability |
| • Persistent severe variable deceleration | |
| • Acidosis (pH<7.2) | |
| • Prolonged severe bradycardia (<80 bpm) | |
| • Persistent tachycardia | |
| • Loss of variability (flat tracing) | |
| • Meconium stained liquor | |
Intra-uterine fetal resuscitation
| 1 | Stop oxytocin stimulation | This improves utero placental blood flow and oxygen delivery to the fetus |
| 2 | Full lateral position | This prevents supine hypotension syndrome and improves oxygen delivery |
| 3 | Oxygen by face masks or nasal prongs | It improves oxygen delivery to the fetus |
| 4 | Give intravenous fluid (1 litre crystalloid) | It improves utero placental blood flow and oxygen delivery to the fetus |
| 5 | Vasopressor is given (eg ephedrine) | This treats low blood pressure and improves placental blood flow |
| 6 | Tocolytic agent is given to stop uterine hyper stimulation | This improves placental blood flow and oxygen delivery |
Case examples of spinal anaesthesia for fetal distress in UBTH
| Patient | Fetal markers | Indication for spinal | Type of loading | Decision to delivery (Minutes) | APGAR scores (min) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| 1 | Bradycardia, meconium stained liquor | Maternal refusal of GA | Co - loading | 7 | 1st 6/10 |
| 2 | Reduced baseline variability | Maternal refusal of GA | Co - loading | 10 | 1st 5/10 |
| 3 | Tachycardia, reduced baseline variability | Difficult airway, | Pre - loading | 12 | 1st 7/10 |
| 4 | Cord proplapse, Bradycardia | Maternal refusal of GA | Co - loading | 5 | 1st 710 |
| 5 | Late deceleration, absent fetal heart variability | Maternal preference | Pre - loading | 6 | 1st 5/10 |
Review of anaesthesia for Caesarean section: UBTH (2007-2011)
| parameter | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| total no of C/S | 878 | 1039 | 996 | 1321 | 1285 |
| total no of Epidural | 18 | 16 | 20 | 20 | 18 |
| total no of GA for C/S | 186 | 204 | 115 | 114 | 95 |
| total no of Spinal Anaesthesia | 674 | 819 | 861 | 1187 | 1172 |
| total no of Fetal Distress | 84 | 116 | 140 | 124 | 182 |
| total no of GA for Fetal Distress | 29 | 41 | 35 | 21 | 20 |
| total no of Spinal for Fetal Distress | 55 | 75 | 105 | 103 | 162 |
| Percentage of Spinal Anaesthesia for Fetal Distress | 65.5% | 64.7% | 75.0% | 83.1% | 89.0% |
No, number; C/S, Caesarean section; GA, General anaesthesia.
Advantages of Spinal Anaesthesia
| High patients satisfaction |
| Avoidance of aspiration pneumonitis |
| Avoidance of awareness |
| Patients’ preference |
| Patients discuss freely with care givers |
| Reduced incidence of PONV |
| Conscious mother, awake neonate |
| Reduced phase 1 recovery time |
| No instrumentation of airway |
| Avoidance of placental transfer of multiple drugs |
| Patients also monitor themselves |
| Less number of anaesthetists required |
| Low post operative morbidity |
| Immediate return to oral intake |
| Cost effectiveness |
Nudgets for Rapid Spinal Anaesthesia
| 1. Standby experienced anaesthetists in labour ward theatre |
| 2. Standby spinal pack in labour ward theatre |
| 3. Pre-loading or co-loading is required with constituted ephedrine on standby |
| 4. Intravenous line put in place in labour ward by obstetrician |
| 5. No touch technique. Scrub and glove rapidly |
| 6. Local infiltration is optional but helpful |
| 7. One touch technique. Once the spinal needle has pierced the skin it must not be withdrawn until CSF is seen and drug is deposited. Difficulty in getting it may allow for the second touch |
| 8. In the absence of loading, 5mg of ephedrine i.v is given prophylactically to prevent precipitous drop in blood pressure |
| 9. Surgery starts almost immediately |