| Literature DB >> 29497633 |
Shinya Yufune1, Motoshi Tanaka1, Ryosuke Akai1, Yasushi Satoh1, Kenichi Furuya2, Katsuo Terui3, Naohiro Kanayama4, Tomiei Kazama1.
Abstract
Amniotic fluid embolism (AFE) is a rare but life-threatening maternal emergency caused by the entry of amniotic fluid contents into the maternal circulation. The clinical manifestations of AFE are heterogeneous, leading to misdiagnosis or treatment delay. Kanayama and colleagues distinguished the cardiopulmonary collapse type (or classic type) from the disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) type of AFE on the basis of the presence of uterine atony and DIC in the latter prior to cardiopulmonary failure. We report a case of DIC-type AFE successfully treated by blood volume replacement and coagulation therapy. The patient was scheduled for elective cesarean delivery because of a previous cesarean section and moyamoya disease. Delivery was uneventful, but massive vaginal bleeding without clotting and ensuing hypovolemic shock occurred 4 h later. She was transferred to the operating room for emergency laparotomy, but sustained a cardiac arrest. The patient was successfully resuscitated and a hysterectomy performed. During surgery, the patient received fresh frozen plasma, platelets, fibrinogen, and antithrombin concentrate. In cardiopulmonary collapse type AFE, cardiopulmonary resuscitation without delay is important. In the present case of DIC-type AFE, however, early supplementation of clotting factors and platelets was critical for patient survival.Entities:
Keywords: Amniotic fluid embolism; Cesarean delivery; Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC); Uterine atony
Year: 2015 PMID: 29497633 PMCID: PMC5818681 DOI: 10.1186/s40981-015-0001-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JA Clin Rep ISSN: 2363-9024
Fig. 1Intraoperative anesthetic course and the result of coagulation tests. HR heart rate (/min), SBP systolic blood pressure (mmHg), DBP diastolic blood pressure, SpO 2 peripheral capillary oxygen saturation (%), FDP fibrin degradation products
Fig. 2Histological sections of the uterus. a Acid mucopolysaccharidic matter was observed in uterine vessels (black arrow), Alcian blue staining, 20×. b Immunohistochemically marked epithelial squames in uterine vessels (black arrows), Cytokeratin AE1/AE3 immunohistochemical staining, 20×
New classification of amniotic fluid embolism
| Initial symptoms | Time from symptom onset to cardiac arrest | Histology | Initial management | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cardiopulmonary collapse type (Classic type) | • Sudden dyspnea | Very short (0–60 min in typical cases) | • Amniotic components in pulmonary vessels | Cardiopulmonary resuscitation including inotropes |
| • Severe hypotension (including cardiac arrest) | ||||
| • Seizure | ||||
| DIC type | • Massive bleeding without clotting | Several hours | • Amniotic components in uterus and/or uterine vessels | Volume resuscitation including supplement of platelets and clotting factors |
| • Uterine atony | • Thrombus in uterine vessels | |||
| • Intestinal edema in uterus |
Modified from [7]
DIC disseminated intravascular coagulation