Maternal Physiology (Exam II) Flashcards

(118 cards)

1
Q

Gravida refers to what?

A

Number of pregnancies (not babies)

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2
Q

Para refers to what?

A

numbers of births (>20weeks)

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3
Q

What is G0P0?

A

Nulligravida/Nulliparous

  • No pregnancies
  • No births
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4
Q

What would G3P2 refer to?

A

Multigravida/ Multiparous

  • 3 pregnancies
  • 2 births
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5
Q

What does Primigravida refer to?

A

“G1P0”
Patient is pregnant and has not had their baby yet OR was pregnant and did not carry the baby to 20 wks or longer

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6
Q

What are the components that result in the 12kg weight gain typical of pregnancies?

A
  • Uterus & Amniotic Fluid = 1kg EACH
  • Fetal/Placental Weight = 4kg
  • New Fat/Protein stores = 4kg
  • Blood volume increase = 2kg
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7
Q

Chart for necessary weight gain for different weight populations:

A
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8
Q

How much does total blood volume increase during pregnancy?

A

30 - 35% increase

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9
Q

When does the increase in total blood volume of the typical pregnant woman occur?
Majority?

A

8 - 32 weeks (Majority by 24 weeks)

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10
Q

What might be the most logical cause for a parturient patient complaining of feeling “bloated”?

A

The increase of their blood volume

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11
Q

Does plasma volume or RBC volume increase more during pregnancy?

A

Both increase but plasma volume increases more.

“Dilutional Anemia”

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12
Q

Why does blood volume increase during pregnancy?

A

To counteract delivery blood loss

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13
Q

Approximate blood loss for vaginal and C/S deliveries:

A

Vaginal: 500 mls

C/S: 800 mls

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14
Q

Approximately when does maternal blood volume return to normal post-delivery?

A

6 weeks

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15
Q

Compare the blood volume of a pregnant patient and a non-pregnant patient in mL/kg.

A

Non = 65mL/kg
Pregnant= 85-90 mL/kg

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16
Q

CO will increase by ___% by term.

A

40%

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17
Q

In regards to hemodynamics, by 6 weeks there will be an increase in maternal _____ ____ and by 8 - 10 weeks there will be an increase in _____ _____.

A

Heart Rate : Stroke Volume

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18
Q

What is the mechanism for increased Stroke Volume in the pregnant patient?

A

↑ Plasma Renin = ↑aldosterone (via increased Na reabsorption and Water retention) = ↑ Preload/Plasma Volume = ↑ SV

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19
Q

How much does uterine blood flow increase during pregancy?

A

Baseline = 50 mL/min
Term = 700 mL/min

10-20x increase!

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20
Q

What is the cause of the pregnancy symptoms of warm skin, flushing, and itching?

A

3-4x increase in skin blood flow

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21
Q

What changes in SVR occur in pregnancy?

A

20% lower

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22
Q

What hormones are responsible for maternal vasodilation?

A
  • Progesterone
  • Prostacyclin
  • Relaxin
  • Estrogen
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23
Q

A parturient patient’s SVR prior to pregnancy was 825 dynes/sec/cm5… What can we roughly expect the SVR to be at term?

A

20% of 825 = 660 dynes/sec/cm5

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24
Q

Pregnancy is a ____ flow, _____ resistance state.

A

High flow : low resistance

↑ CO and ↓ SVR

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25
Do the following increase or decrease during pregnancy? - Blood volume - Cardiac Output - SVR - Heart rate - Renal Vasculature Resistance
- ↑ Blood volume - ↑ Cardiac Output - ↓ SVR - ↑ Heart rate - ↓ Renal Vasculature Resistance
26
What changes are seen in a maternal heart due to pregnancy?
**Eccentric Hypertrophy** (as much as 50%)
27
How does the heart shift due to pregnancy? Why does this occur?
- Heart shifts anterior and leftward due to diaphragmatic elevation.
28
Where does the point of maximal impulse for auscultation shift in a pregnant patient?
4th ICS mid-clavicular line | Up and to the Left
29
What EKG changes are seen in a pregnant patient?
- **Left Axis shift in 3rd trimester** - Lead III T-wave inversion - PR interval shortened - ST segment depressed - QT interval MAY be increased
30
What are the 2 correct statements as to why the PR interval is likely to be shortened in the 3rd trimester? A. Decreased AV conduction velocity B. Increased Sympathetic Activity C. Increased Parasympathetic Activity D. Increased AV node delay E. Increased AV conduction velocity
B. Increased Sympathetic Activity E. Increased AV conduction velocity
31
Will the following leads show a positive or negative defelection in parturient patients? Lead I: Lead II: aVL: aVF:
Lead I: Positive Lead II: Negative aVL: Positive aVF: Negative
32
What are the most common EKG abnormalities in pregnant patients?
Tachydysrhythmias (Sinus tach, PAC, PVC)
33
4 Common causes of tachydysrhythmias in parturient patients?
1. Ion channel conduction changes 2. Increase in cardiac size 3. Autonomic tone changes 4. Hormones
34
What valvular changes are typical of pregnancy?
- Tricuspid & Pulmonic regurgitation (>90% pts) - Mitral regurgitation (~25% of pts) *These typically reverse postpartum*.
35
What heart sound is often heard in the 3rd trimester? What causes this?
Ventricular Gallop *Due to inrush of large blood volume into very compliant left ventricle*.
36
What heart sound disappears at term?
4th heart sound
37
What murmur can occur due to cardiac enlargement? Where is this best heard?
- Grade II SEM (systolic ejection murmur) - Heard right side of heart, near sternal border
38
What occurs in the supine position of a pregnant woman?
Aortocaval compression *Uterus compresses great vessels*. *Occurs as early as 13-16 weeks*.
39
What exacerbates aortocaval compression?
**Anesthesia due to vasodilation**.
40
What are the s/s of aortocaval compression?
- **Fetal Distress** - Tachycardia → bradycardia - N/V - Pallor - Loss of Consc.
41
What is the treatment for aortocaval compression?
LUD (Left Uterine Displacement) **Done by tilting the patient to the left**.
42
What cardiovascular changes occur during the first stage of labor?
- CO increases between & during contractions - HR increases - Autotransfusion of 300-500mls from uterus to general circulation w/ each contraction.
43
What cardiovascular changes occur during the second stage of labor?
CO increases by 50% due to: - Pushing effort - ↑ SV & HR
44
What cardiovascular changes occur immediately after labor?
CO increases by 60 - 80% due to - Relief from vena cava obstruction - Uterine contracts blood into circulation
45
When does CO start to return to normal post-delivery? How long does it take to completely normalize?
10 mins 24 hours
46
What happens to the airway in obstetric patients?
47
What are the anesthetic implications of edematous airways?
- Smaller ETT necessary - Avoid NGT/Nasal trumpets (bloody nose) - Airway obstruction risk increases
48
How does the hormone estrogen effect the obstetric patient's pulmonary system?
Estrogen will ↑ number and sensitivity of progesterone receptors in the respiratory center of the brain.
49
How does the hormone Progesterone effect the obstetric patient's pulmonary system?
- **↑ respiratory center sensitivity to CO₂** - Bronchodilates - Causes edematous airways - Hyperemia (increased volume in blood vessels)
50
How does the hormone Relaxin effect the obstetric patient's pulmonary system?
Causes ligamentous attachments to lower ribs to relax. - subcostal angle increases - widened AP & transverse diameter of chest wall.
51
Is Total Lung Capacity reduced or preserved during pregnancy?
**Preserved**. Chest height is shortened but A-P dimension increases with barrel shape due to relaxin.
52
What is FRC?
Volume of air that prevents complete emptying of lungs and keeps small airways open.
53
What is ERV?
Volume of air that can be expired with maximum effort at the end of normal expiration.
54
What is RV?
Residual Volume = Volume of air in the lungs after ERV is expired
55
Uterine elevation of the diaphragm results in a _____% decrease in FRC.
20% ↓ in FRC (Both ERV and RV are decreased).
56
What causes the earlier closure of small airways in the obstetric patient?
Elevated Diaphragm → more negative pleural pressure = small airway closure
57
What position results in a more profound decrease in FRC?
Supine (30% decrease) Causes increased alveolar atelectasis
58
What happens if closing capacity exceeds FRC?
Small airway closure & V/Q mismatch leading to O₂ desaturation.
59
What respiratory volumes are increased during pregnancy?
- VT ( increased CO₂ production = increased respiratory drive) via Increased progesterone - IC (Inspiratory Capacity)
60
What respiratory volumes are unchanged by pregnancy?
- TLC (all lung volumes) - VC (IC + VT + ERV)
61
How can pre-oxygenation be achieved?
- 3 - 5 VC breathes with tight face mask w/ 100% O₂ - 8 deep breaths at O₂ flow rate 10L/min over 1 min.
62
What FeO₂ (fraction of expired O₂) is desirable?
0.9 or greater
63
What positioning is helpful for preoxygenation?
20° Reverse Trendelenburg
64
How much does O₂ consumption increase by at term?
20% Due to increased metabolism of mom & baby, increased work of breathing, and increased cardiac workload.
65
How do minute ventilation and alveolar ventilation change in pregnancy?
Both Increase. *RR increases by 1-2 breaths per minute, mediated by hormonal changes*.
66
How do ABG's change during pregnancy? What does this result in?
PaCO₂ decreases by 8-10 mmHg PaO₂ increases by 5 mmHg *Respiratory Alkalosis is normal in healthy pregnancies*.
67
Compare and contrast a typical ABG vs an obstetric ABG.
68
What pulmonary change occurs during the first stage of labor?
Minute ventilation increases by up to 140%.
69
What pulmonary change(s) occurs during the second stage of labor?
- V̇T goes up by 200% - Maternal CO₂ decreases by 10 - 15 - O₂ consumption increases - Maternal lactate increases *Supplemental O₂ might be necessary*.
70
What hematologic changes occur during pregnancy?
- Plasma volume increases more than RBC mass resulting in dilutional anemia. - Hgb drops by 2.5 g/dL - HCT decreases by 6.5%
71
What Hgb range do we like for maternal patients?
11 - 13 g/dL - Less than 11 is abnormal - > 13 means you need to watch for pre-eclampsia.
72
What changes occur with platelets during pregnancy?
- Normal 165 - 415 - No change or moderate decrease is typically seen with pregnancy.
73
Why do we care about platelets in obstetric patients?
Risk for epidural hematoma from neuraxial techniques.
74
Pregnancy produces a hypercoagulable or hypocoagulable state?
Hypercoagulable.
75
What coagulation factors increase due to pregnancy?
All of them, **except II, V, XI, and XIII**.
76
What coagulation factor has the most significant increase during pregnancy?
Factor 1 (Fibrinogen)
77
What is hyperfibrinogenemia?
Fibrinogen (Factor I) > 400mg/dL at term - Increased clotting efficiency - Impaired fibrinolysis
78
**What factors are increased at term gestation**? *Will be on test*
- I (Fibrinogen) - VII (proconvertin) - VIII (Antihemophilic factor) - IX (Christmas factor) - X (Stuart-Prower factor) - XII (Hageman factor)
79
**What factors are unchanged at term gestation**? *Will be on test*
- II (Prothrombin) - V (Proaccelerin)
80
**What factors are decreased at term gestation**? *Will be on test*
- XI (Thromboplastin antecedent) - XIII (Fibrin-stabilizing factor) - PT & PTT ↓ by 20% - Fibrinolytic activity overall decreases in 3rd trimester
81
What occurs with WBC's during pregnancy?
- Increase steadily to 9 - 10 throughout pregnancy - Spike up to 34 during labor
82
How does immune function change during pregnancy?
Leukocyte function is impaired - Increased severity to infections - Patients with Autoimmune disease will see improved symptoms Antibody titers are decreased to certain viruses - Measles, Flu A, Herpes simplex
83
All parturient patients are considered to be _____ stomach.
full
84
How does lower esophageal sphincter tone change throughout pregnancy?
- Tone decreases throughout pregnancy with the lowest tone occurring at term. - LES tone normalizes at 4 weeks post-partum.
85
How long postpartum should the anesthesia provider treat a patient as a full stomach?
4-6 weeks
86
What is Mendelson's Syndrome?
Aspiration pneumonitis & inflammatory response of lung parenchyma
87
What puts one at greater risk of Mendelson's syndrome? What can we give this patients?
- pH < 2.5 - > 25mL gastric volume Bicitra
88
Uterus takes ____ weeks to return to normal size.
6
89
What changes occur in the liver during pregnancy?
↑ risk of esophageal varices due to increased portal vein pressure. ↑ Liver enzymes and cholesterol
90
What hepatic measurement will continue to decrease futher after delivery? When will this return to normal?
Colloid oncotic pressure 6 weeks postpartum
91
What occurs with pseudocholinesterase levels during pregnancy?
pseudocholinesterase decreases by 25 - 33% during the peri-delivery timeframe. *Usually still okay to give Sux**. ## Footnote takes 2-6 wks to return to normal
92
When can cholestasis occur to parturient patients?
3rd trimester | 1 out of every 100 patients
93
What are the s/s of cholestasis?
- Pruritis - ↑ bilirubin - ↑ LFTs
94
What are the consequences of cholestasis in obstetric patients?
- ↑ risk of cholelithiasis - ↑ risk of cholecystectomy - ↑ risk of cholestasis in subsequent pregnancies
95
During pregnancy the kidneys see a _____ increase in renal blood flow.
75%
96
What are the results of increased renal blood flow during pregnancy?
- ↑ GFR - ↑ Creatinine clearance - ↓ Creatinine - ↓ BUN
97
What BUN/Creatinine levels are typical of pregnant patients?
- BUN: 8 - 9 mg/dL at term - Ct: 0.5 - 0.6 mg/dL at term
98
What changes in the urine can occur during pregnancy?
- Glucosuria common (Glucose reabsorption can't keep up with ↑ GFR) - Proteinuria
99
What would a finding of proteinuria possibly indicate in a parturient patient?
preeclampsia
100
What would the following labs in a parturient patient suggest? - BUN > 15mg/dL - Creatinine > 1.0 mg/dL - Creatinine Clearance < 100 mL/min
Abnormal renal function *Further evaluation required*.
101
What occurs with the thyroid during pregnancy?
Enlargement by 50 - 70% *Hypothyroidism may occur (10%) and require levothyroxine to prevent fetal issues*.
102
Insulin resistance causing increased blood glucose during pregnancy is the result of what hormone?
Human placental lactogen *Hormone that prepares the body for breastfeeding*.
103
How does adrenal function change in the parturient patient?
- ↑ cortisol (200% by term) - ↑ plasma endorphins
104
How does the anterior pituitary change during pregnancy?
- 300% increase in size - ↑ Prolactin secretion
105
What causes increased acne seen in pregnancy?
↑ Prolactin secretion by adenophypophysis hyperplasia.
106
How does the posterior pituitary change during pregnancy?
Oxytocin secretion increases by 30% by term - Stimulates contractions - Breast milk letdown - "Bonding hormone"
107
A parturient patient is complaining of SI joint pain as well as knee pain. A proficient CRNA would understand that this is likely due to an increase in what hormone?
Relaxin
108
What nerve pains are common with pregnancy?
- Sciatic - Meralgia paresthetica
109
What is meralgia paresthetica?
- Compression of lateral femoral cutaneous nerve at exit site of pelvis) Tingling, numbness, and burning on lateral aspect of the thigh.
110
What is the reason for lots of pelvic pain during pregnancy?
Lumbar lordosis w/ anterior pelvic tilt and narrowing of intervertebral spaces.
111
What CNS changes occur during pregnancy?
- ↑ CBF - ↑ BBB permeability - ↑ pain threshold
112
What is the mechanism for increased pain threshold for parturient patients?
- Progesterone activates κ-opioid receptors - ↑ plasma endorphins
113
What occurs with the epidural space in pregnant women?
- ↑ Venous plexus volume (Smaller epidural space) - ↓ CSF volume
114
What is the result of increased venous plexus volume?
**Engorged epidural veins** and a higher risk of venous puncture during epidural placement.
115
What is the result of decreased CSF volume on local anesthetic spread?
↑ spread of LA
116
T/F. A higher total dose of local anesthetic is necessary to produce the same level of neuraxial block in parturient patients.
False. A **lower total dose** of LA is necessary.
117
Parturient patients have an increased sensitivity to _______ neuromuscular blockers.
**Non-depolarizing**. Roc & Vec
118
What can happen with succinylcholine administration in a pregnant patient?
Prolonged paralysis due to ↓ pseudocholinesterase activity.