🔴 Obstetric ACLS – AHA Guidelines (2020 Update, reaffirmed in 2022)
âš¡ Why Special Considerations Are Needed:
- Pregnancy induces physiological changes (↑ blood volume, ↓ SVR, ↑ cardiac output, ↑ oxygen consumption, etc.)
- Gravid uterus can compress major vessels → supine hypotension → reduced preload
- Fetal viability adds a dual-patient complexity—resuscitative efforts must consider both maternal and fetal survival
- Most maternal arrests are due to reversible causes (e.g., hemorrhage, eclampsia, embolism, sepsis)
🩺 Key Principles of Obstetric ACLS
1. Team Preparation
- Clearly defined roles
- Ensure PPE, especially for COVID-19 scenarios
- Immediate notification of obstetric and neonatal teams
- Uterine displacement and early perimortem cesarean are part of the initial algorithm
2. Recognize Cardiac Arrest in Pregnancy
- Sudden collapse, pulselessness
- Loss of consciousness
- Respiratory or cardiac arrest
- Always assess circulation, airway, and breathing (CAB)
3. Perform High-Quality CPR
- Chest Compressions:
- Depth: at least 2 inches (5 cm)
- Rate: 100–120/min
- Full chest recoil, minimal interruptions
- Hand placement is slightly higher on the sternum due to diaphragm displacement
- Airway and Breathing:
- 30:2 ratio until airway secured
- Prefer early advanced airway (ETT) if trained
- Use 100% Oâ‚‚, avoid hyperventilation
4. Left Uterine Displacement (LUD)
- Crucial from 20 weeks onward to prevent aortocaval compression
- Methods:
- Manual displacement (preferred): Push uterus to the left
- Or tilt the patient (wedge under right hip or 15–30° tilt)
- Avoid placing in pure left lateral position → ineffective CPR
5. Defibrillation
- Use standard energy levels (no dose modification)
- Pads may need repositioning (anterior-posterior is preferred)
- Fetal monitoring should not delay maternal defibrillation
6. Medications
- Standard ACLS drugs used at standard doses:
- Epinephrine 1 mg IV every 3–5 min
- Amiodarone, lidocaine if needed
- Magnesium sulfate if torsades de pointes or eclampsia
- No pregnancy-specific dose changes
7. Identify and Treat Reversible Causes (4Hs + 4Ts)
|
4 Hs |
4 Ts |
|
Hypovolemia |
Tension pneumothorax |
|
Hypoxia |
Tamponade (cardiac) |
|
Hydrogen ion (acidosis) |
Toxins |
|
Hypo-/hyperkalemia, Hypoglycemia |
Thromboembolism (AMI/PE) |
Special pregnancy-related additions:
- Hemorrhage (PPH, uterine rupture)
- Hypertensive disorders (eclampsia)
- Sepsis
- Amniotic fluid embolism
🚨 Perimortem Cesarean Delivery (PMCD)
➤ Indication:
- No ROSC after 5 minutes of CPR
- Fetus is ≥20 weeks (uterus palpable at or above umbilicus)
➤ Why?
- Relieves aortocaval compression
- Improves maternal venous return
- Improves oxygenation and ventilation
- May improve chance of fetal survival if <5 minutes from arrest
➤ How?
- Done at bedside—don’t wait for OR
- Incision: midline vertical → faster access
- Neonatal team should be ready to receive neonate
🧠Special Situations
🟠Maternal Trauma:
- CPR modifications may be needed
- Consider hemorrhage, pelvic fracture
🟠Eclampsia:
- Use magnesium sulfate cautiously
- Seizure control is priority
🟠Anesthetic Complications:
- High spinal, local anesthetic systemic toxicity (LAST)
- Airway complications → rapid sequence intubation
🟣 Post-Resuscitation Care
- ICU admission
- Maintain oxygenation, hemodynamic stability
- Consider targeted temperature management (case-by-case)
- Monitor for multi-organ dysfunction
- Initiate appropriate OB and neonatal follow-up
📚 Summary: OB ACLS vs Standard ACLS
|
Feature |
Standard ACLS |
Obstetric ACLS |
|
LUD |
Not needed |
Yes ≥20 weeks |
|
Defib energy |
Standard |
Same |
|
Drug doses |
Standard |
Same |
|
PMCD |
No |
Yes if ≥20 weeks, no ROSC at 4 min |
|
Team |
BLS + ACLS |
Add OB, NICU, anesthesia |

