Obstetric anesthesia Flashcards
Pain pathways innervating the uterus, vagina, and perineum
o T10 – L1 supply innervation to the uterus
o L1-L4 supply pain pathways to the vagina and deep pelvic structures
o S2 - S4 supply nerve fibers to the pudendal nerve
Types of obstetric anesthesia
Regional
Local
General
Types of regional anesthesia
Lumbar epidural injection:
- the most common type for vaginal delivery.
- for 1st and 2nd stages of labor
- Bupivicaine or similar local anesthetic is given to the epidural space.
- Possible hypotension and nausea from sympathetic nerve block, treat with ephedrine.
o Spinal injection:
- most common type for C-section.
- not used much for vaginal deliveries due to short duration of action
- patient must be constantly attended and vital signs must be checked every
5 min to detect and treat possible hypotension
Contraindications to regional anesthesia
! Absolute: patient refusal, coagulopathy, infection at needle insertion site, severe
hypovolemia with ongoing blood loss
! Relative: prior back surgery, certain cardiac lesions (especially aortic stenosis),
increased intracranial pressure
Types of local anesthesia
Pudendal block
- Been replaced by epidural injections
- Injections of a local anesthetic through the vaginal wall so that the anesthetic
bathes the pudendal nerve as it crosses the ischial spine
- It will anestheize the lower vagina, perineum, and posterior vulva
- It is a simple method for uncomplicated spontaneous vaginal deliveries
Paracervical block
- Rarely appropriate for delivery because incidence of fetal bradycardia is > 15%
- It is mainly used for 1st or 2nd trimester abortion
- 5-10ml of lidocaine is injected at the 3 and 9 o’clock positions
General anesthesia, drugs used
o Nitrous oxide 40% with O2
- may be used for analgesia during vaginal delivery as long as verbal contact with the woman is maintained (inhalation with self-administration)
- Possible staff-toxicity and can only be used in well-ventilated rooms
o Thiopental (sedative-hypnotic) is commonly given IV with other drugs (e.g.
succinylcholine, N2O + O2) for induction of general anesthesia during c-section
- Induction is rapid and recovery is prompt
- It is mandatory during emergency c-section
o Opioids:
- All opioids readily cross the placental barrier and may cause neonatal
respiratory depression (antidote: naloxone)
- Fentanyl and nalbuphine are the most commonly used and have short neonatal
half-lives
o Potent and volatile inhalation drugs (e.g. isoflurane) can cause marked depression in mother and fetus and is therefore not recommended for routine delivery