🩸 Anemia in Pregnancy
🔹 Definition
Anemia in pregnancy is defined by the World Health Organization (WHO) as:
- Hemoglobin (Hb) < 11 g/dL in 1st and 3rd trimesters
- Hb < 10.5 g/dL in 2nd trimester
Severity classification (WHO):
- Mild: Hb 10.0–10.9 g/dL
- Moderate: Hb 7.0–9.9 g/dL
- Severe: Hb < 7.0 g/dL
🔹 Physiological Changes in Pregnancy
- Plasma volume increases by ~50%
- Red cell mass increases by ~20–30%
- Resulting in physiological hemodilution, often referred to as “physiological anemia” of pregnancy
🔹 Etiology
🔸 Nutritional
- Iron deficiency anemia (most common; ~75–90%)
- Folate deficiency
- Vitamin B12 deficiency
🔸 Non-nutritional
- Hemoglobinopathies (e.g., thalassemia, sickle cell disease)
- Aplastic anemia
- Anemia of chronic disease
- Blood loss (e.g., from bleeding piles, antepartum hemorrhage)
🔹 Iron Deficiency Anemia (IDA)
Causes:
- Increased iron demands (~1000 mg total during pregnancy)
- Inadequate intake/absorption
- Parasitic infestations, frequent pregnancies
Investigations:
- Hb, peripheral smear (microcytic hypochromic anemia)
- Serum ferritin (< 15 ng/mL = diagnostic)
- Serum iron, TIBC, transferrin saturation
🔹 Maternal & Fetal Implications
🔸 Maternal:
- Fatigue, palpitations, dyspnea
- Increased risk of infections
- Preeclampsia
- Preterm labor
- Cardiac failure (especially during labor and postpartum)
- Poor wound healing, postpartum hemorrhage (PPH)
🔸 Fetal:
- Intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR)
- Preterm birth
- Low birth weight
- Stillbirth
- Poor iron stores in neonate
🔹 Anesthetic Considerations
🔸 Preoperative Evaluation:
- Full anemia workup
- Cardiorespiratory reserve (CVS exam, ECG)
- Fatigue, palpitations, dyspnea on exertion ,Pallor,wide Pulse Pressure,Tachycardia
- Rule out congestive cardiac failure
- Optimize Hb before elective surgeries or delivery
🔸 During Labor:
- Avoid hypoxia, acidosis, Positional hypotension
- Provide adequate analgesia (e.g., epidural) to reduce oxygen consumption
- Oxygen supplementation
- Avoid conditions which increases Fio2-shivering,fever,Pain,Light plane.
- Blood cross-match and availability
- In sicle cell avoid factors with precipitate Sickling-Hypoxemia,Hypovolemia,Hypotension,Hypoventilation,Hypothermia,acidosis,Light plane
🔸 Regional vs. General Anesthesia:
- Regional anesthesia (epidural/spinal) is preferred if platelet count and hemodynamics are stable, not Preferred in Vitamin b12 deficiency with CNS symptoms as it worsen Subacute degeneration of spinal cord
- General anesthesia: Used cautiously; rapid desaturation risk; proper preoxygenation and suction ready
- Use N2O cautiously(worsen Vit B12 deficiency)
🔸 Postpartum:
- Monitor for PPH
- Iron therapy continuation
- Evaluate need for blood transfusion
🔹 Management Strategies
🔸 Iron Deficiency Anemia:
- Oral iron: Ferrous sulfate, gluconate, fumarate
- Dose: 100–200 mg elemental iron/day
- Add folic acid: 0.5–1 mg/day
- Parenteral iron: For moderate/severe cases or oral intolerance
- Iron sucrose, ferric carboxymaltose
- Blood transfusion: For Hb <7 g/dL or symptomatic anemia with decompensation
🔸 Folic Acid Deficiency:
- 5 mg/day PO
🔸 Vitamin B12 Deficiency:
- IM injections of hydroxocobalamin
🔹 Prevention (Public Health Perspective)
- WHO recommends daily iron + folic acid supplementation
- 30–60 mg elemental iron + 400 μg folic acid
- Deworming (after 1st trimester)
- Nutritional counseling
- Birth spacing
🔹 MCQs for Practice
- The most common cause of anemia in pregnancy is:
- A. Aplastic anemia
- B. Iron deficiency anemia ✅
- C. Folate deficiency
- D. Hemolytic anemia
- Parenteral iron is indicated in all except:
- A. Oral iron intolerance
- B. Non-compliance
- C. Mild anemia in 1st trimester ✅
- D. Imminent delivery
- Physiological anemia in pregnancy is due to:
- A. Hemolysis
- B. Decreased erythropoietin
- C. Plasma volume increase > RBC mass ✅
- D. Blood loss

