Caesarean Section Flashcards

1
Q

What percentage of dystocia cases can be managed with medical therapy and manipulation?

A

20 - 40% of cases

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2
Q

Maternal indications for caesarean? (4)

A

Prolonged gestation (>70 days c.f. normal 63 +/- 2 days)

Primary uterine inertia refractory to medical treatment (>6 hrs)

Secondary uterine inertia (> 2 hrs between puppies)

Maternal pelvic abnormalities

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3
Q

Foetal indications for caesarean? (4)

A

Foetal oversize

Small litter - often large foetus and primary inertia due to little hormonal initiation from the foetus

Foetal malpresentation

Foetal death - if unresponsive to oxytocin and supportive care

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4
Q

Why is manual reposition hard?

A

Due to the size of bitch/ queen it is difficult and leads to iatrogenic damage of the foetus (30 mins of active straining)

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5
Q

What is iatrogenic damage?

A

illness caused by medical examination or treatment

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6
Q

What is uterine inertia?

A

abnormal relaxation of the uterus during labour causing a lack of obstetric progress

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7
Q

Why is ultrasonography useful during dystocia?

A

can be useful in assessment of foetal viability.

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8
Q

Emergency pre-op C-section considerations

A

Is the patient compromised?
Circulatory status +/- sepsis

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9
Q

What can be used for crystalloid replacement?

A

balanced electrolyte solution +/- glucose or dextrose

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10
Q

Considerations for +/- desexing during c-section

A

May prolong anaesthesia/ surgery

May save a subsequent procedure

Be mindful of loss of circulating volume

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11
Q

How to minimise risk of aspiration pneumonia?

A

Food is rarely withheld

Use prokinetic metoclopramide to increase lower sphincter tone

Also careful ET tube cuff inflation and removal

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12
Q

C-section timing

A

Time from anesthetic induction to delivery of pups should be as short as possible

Prepare as much as possible before induction (clipping, skin prep, equipment setup, staff ready for puppy care)

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13
Q

C-section anaesthetic goals

A

Maximise dam safety
Minimise foetal depression

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14
Q

C-section incision

A

Ventral midline approach
2-3cm cranial, 5-6cm caudal to the umbilicus

Needs to be a large enough approach to allow the uterus to be exteriorised quickly

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15
Q

Why do you need to be careful of when making the c-section incision?

A

Take care not to damage the abdominal contents particularly the gravid uterus

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16
Q

Once exteriorised, what do you need to do to the uterus?

A

Pack off the uterus from the abdominal cavity with laparotomy sponges
- be careful not to tear the uterine vessels or uterus

17
Q

Where do you incise the uterus ?

A

In an avascular area within the body that will allow removal of foetuses from both horns

Sometimes multiple incisions are required

18
Q

How to get the puppies out (4 steps)

A
  1. Milk each foetus individually down the horn to the uterine incision (avoid swinging in arc as has been implicated as a cause of brain damage)
  2. Break through the foetal membrane
  3. Clamp the umbilicus 2-3cm from its base
  4. Rub the foetuses vigorously to stimulate breathing
19
Q

What drug can be used to stimulate breathing in puppies?

A

Sublingual dopram
0.2-1mg (1 drop)

20
Q

What do you need to check before closure?

A

If all foetuses are removed
Include check of uterine body and vagina

21
Q

C-section closure

A

Single or double uterine closure
- simple continuous inner - submucosa not into lumen
- continuous inverting outer
3/0 - 4/0 monofilament, absorbable
Taper point needle

22
Q

What do you need to do in between closing the uterus and the abdomen ?

A

Change gloves and instruments

23
Q

What do you do to the uterus before returning it to the abdomen ?

A

Thoroughly lavage it

24
Q

3 complications of c-section

A

Haemorrhage - intrauterine or peritoneal (ligature failure)
Infection - long procedure or gross contamination
Foetal or maternal death