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Cardiac Arrest in Pregnant Patient

Cardiac Arrest in Pregnant Patient. Ojaghi Haghighi MD. It’s 3:00 AM now and you are very tired after an exhausting shift Suddenly a pregnant patient is transferred in to ED by EMTs You evaluate the patient quickly you are shocked, the patient is unresponsive without any respiratory effort.

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Cardiac Arrest in Pregnant Patient

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  1. Cardiac Arrest in Pregnant Patient OjaghiHaghighi MD

  2. It’s 3:00 AM now and you are very tired after an exhausting shift • Suddenly a pregnant patient is transferred in to ED by EMTs • You evaluate the patient quickly • you are shocked, the patient is unresponsive without any respiratory effort

  3. So • What are you going to do?

  4. Perspective • overall maternal mortality rate: • 13.95 deaths per 100 000 maternities1 • Cardiac arrest in pregnancy: • 1:20 000 in 2007 • 1:30 000 in 20022 • Survival Rate: • 6.9% (poorer than others)3 • 1Lewis G, ed. The Confidential Enquiry into Maternal and Child Health(CEMACH). Saving mothers’ lives: reviewing maternal deaths to make motherhood safer—2003–2005. The Seventh Report on Confidential Enquiries into Maternal Deaths in the United Kingdom. London: CEMACH. 2007. • 2 Department of Health, Welsh Office, Scottish Office Department of Health, Department of Health and Social Services, Northern Ireland. Why mothers die. Report on confidential enquiries into maternal deathsin the United Kingdom 2000–2002. London (UK): The Stationery Office; 2004. • 3 Dijkman A, Huisman CM, Smit M, Schutte JM, Zwart JJ, vanRoosmalen JJ, Oepkes D. Cardiac arrest in pregnancy: increasing use of perimortem caesarean section due to emergency skills training? BJOG. 2010;117:282–287.

  5. Ethiology • Cardiac disease*: • Acute MI • Aortic dissection • Congenital Heart Disease & Pulmonary HTN • Mg toxicity • Preeclampsia/ Eclampsia • PTE • Amniotic fluid embolism • Anesthetic complications • * Lewis G, ed. The Confidential Enquiry into Maternal and Child Health(CEMACH). Saving mothers’ lives: reviewing maternal deaths to make motherhood safer—2003–2005. The Seventh Report on Confidential Enquiries into Maternal Deaths in the United Kingdom. London: CEMACH. 2007.

  6. Critical elements when you face with critically ill pregnant patients • You faced with two patient • Best hope of fetal survival is maternal survival • Pregnancy caused physiologic changes • Identify critical patients and try to prevent cardiac arrest

  7. How can we prevent the doom event? • Place the patient in the full left-lateral position • Give 100% oxygen • IV access above the diaphragm • Assess for hypotension • Consider reversible cause of critical illness

  8. But we can’t prevent cardiac arrest every time • So • You must start CPR immediately

  9. Call for Help • Activate maternal cardiac arrest team immediately • Do not forget documentation event onset time

  10. CAB Sequence

  11. Patient positioning??? • Place patient in supine position!! With manual Lt uterine displacement for obviously gravid uterus

  12. Start chest compression immediately with high quality • 30:2 • Place hands slightly higher on the sternum • Assess quality with waveform capnography • If your try is unsuccessful • Place patient in Lt lateral tilt position 27-30 degree

  13. But if chest compression remain inadequate? • Consider immediate emergency C/S

  14. Airway • You face with: • Potentially difficult airway • Increased risk of aspiration • Rapid desaturation • This is critical to use: • BMV and suctioning optimally • Prepare for advanced airway management

  15. Breathing • The facts: • Rapid hypoxemia • ↓FRC and ↑O2 Demand • ↑ Intrapulmonary shunt • ↓ Ventilation volumes • Elevated diaphragm • Support Oxygenation/ Ventilation • Monitor SPO2 Closely • But How?

  16. Do not forget: You should look for visible chest rise

  17. Defibrillation • The Facts: • It is safe • Concern about arcing around external & internal fetal monitors?? • There is no evidence • But reasonable to remove them • Defibrillation dose?? • An AED* should be apply as soon as possible * Automated external defibrillator

  18. Do Not Forget!! • BLS is cornerstone of ACLS • All activities(CAB) should keep on • What’s your Idea about ABCD of ACLS??

  19. Airway • You faced with an difficult airway, Why?? • You should insert an advanced airway • Experienced provider

  20. Breathing • Ventilation with O2 100% • What is Compression/Ventilation ratio? • 100 Compressions/ min / 8-10 breathes/min without synchronization • Do avoid hyperventilation plz!!! • Continuous pulseoximetry • Continuous wave capnography

  21. Circulation • Large bore IV lines • Drugs?? • According to ACLS recommendations • Defibrillation? • According to ACLS protocol

  22. So what’s D?? • Differential Dx • Recall: • Hs & Ts • BEAU-CHOPS

  23. Hypovolemia Hypoxia Hydrogen ion Hypo/Hyperkalemia Hypothermia Toxin Tamponade T.P Thrombosis (coronary or pulmonary)

  24. BEAU-CHOPS • Bleeding • Embolism: • Pulmonary • Amniotic fluid • Anesthetic Complication • Uterine Atony • Cardiac disease • HTN: • Preeclampsia • Eclampsia • Other: • Mg toxicity • Placenta abruptio/previa • Sepsis

  25. 4 min after cardiac arrest • ROSC* has not been achieved • So what’s are you going to do? * Return of spontaneous circulation

  26. Perimortem C/S

  27. Decision to C/S Performance?? • Facts: • The primary importance is mother life • Aortocaval compression by gravid uterus?? • Fetal viability • No ROSC after 4 min of cardiac arrest • Despite good BLS & ACLS an correction of reversible causes • Unsuccessful chest compression • Obvious nonsurvivable mother injury with viable fetus

  28. So this is called Emergency C/S • Do not forget continuing BLS & ACLS before and after Emergency C/S

  29. How? • Activation of emergency C/S team at the onset of arrest • If there is an obvious gravid uterus • Emergency C/S may be considered at 4 min: • If there is no ROSC • Goal: • The actual delivery takes no longer 5 min • This needs institutional preparation with multidisciplinary approach

  30. Intensive care • Correction of causes • Therapeutic hypothermia??

  31. THANKS

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