Morbidly obese parturient : Challenges for the anaesthesiologist , including managing the difficult airway in obstetrics . What is new ?

With technological advances, the world is moving fast and, at the same time, the population worldwide is becoming fatter and fatter. Obesity now prevails in all sections of people irrespective of whether it is a developed or developing or a poor country. As the person becomes rich in his fat the economic reserves of that country becomes thin. The World Health Organization (WHO) predicts that there will be 2.3 billion overweight adults in the world by 2015, and more than 700 million of them will be obese.[1]

in the developed and the effluent in the developing countries are obese.Data from the national health and nutrition examination surveys show that the percentage of the American adult population with obesity BMI more than 30 has increased from 14.5% to 30.5% by 2000.As many as 64% of the US adults >20 years of age were overweight between the years of 1999 and 2000.The extreme obesity BMI >40 has also increased and effects 4.7% of the population.In 2003-4, 17.1% of the US children and adolescents were overweight and 32.2% of the adults were obese. [4,5]In the United Kingdom, there were 665 women with extreme obesity in an estimated 764,387 women delivering, representing an estimated prevalence of 8.7 cases per 10,000 deliveries (95% CI 8.1-9.4). [6]

PREVALENCE IN INDIA
In India, obesity has reached an epidemic proportion, affecting 5% of the country's population. [7]10] Indians are genetically susceptible to weight accumulation, especially around the waist.
Saha and others [11][12][13] submitted to the National Family Health Survey that there is an increased trend towards overweight or obesity in Indian women from 10 in 1998-9 to 14.6 in 2005.
In India, states that topped the list of rates of obesity were Punjab (30.3% males, 37.5% females), Kerala (24.3% males, 34% females) and Goa (20.8% males, 27% females). [14]IPOCYTE Although adipocyte [Figure 1] has generally been regarded as a storage depot for fat, it is also an endocrine cell that releases numerous molecules.These include energy balance regulating hormone leptin, cytokinin such as tumour necrosis factor alpha and interleukin (IL)-6, compliment factors such as factor-D, prothrombotic factors such as plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 and a component of the blood pressure regulating system, angiotensinogen.These factors play a role in the physiology of lipid homeostasis, insulin sensitivity blood pressure control, coagulation and vascular health, and are likely to contribute to obesityrelated pathologies.

ROLE OF GENES VERSUS ENVIRONMENT
Obesity is commonly seen in families and heritability of body weight is similar to that for height.Inheritance is not Mendelian.Whatever the role of the genes, it is clear that the environment plays a key role in obesity.However, identification of ob gene mutation in genetically obese ob/ob mice represented a major breakthrough in this field.The OB gene is present in humans and is expressed in fat.

PHYSIOLOGICAL CHANGES IN PREGNANCY AND IN THE RESPIRATORY SYSTEM OF MORBIDLY OBESE PREGNANT PATIENTS
Changes in the respiratory system during pregnancy are manifest as alterations in the upper airway, minute ventilation, lung volumes and arterial oxygenation [Table 2].

MINUTE VENTILATION
An increase in minute ventilation is one of the earliest and most dramatic changes in the respiratory function during pregnancy, whereby chest wall compliance is decreased.As a result, the work of breathing is increased and ventilation become diaphragmatic and positiondependent.Pulmonary function studies in obesity suggest a restrictive pattern of lung disease, and the most constant changes are reduction in expiratory reserve volume, vital capacity and functional residual capacity; however, the inspiratory capacity is increased in obese parturients.Increased closing volume with decreased expiratory reserve volume results in underventilation of the dependent lung regions [Figure 2].Obstructive sleep apnoea is not uncommon in obese women who become pregnant.Pregnancy has some protective effects on sleep apnoea despite the hyperemia Ventillatory changes are more important than circulatory alterations in determining the alveolar concentration of inhaled anaesthetics.Dose requirements for volatile anaesthetics drugs are reduced during pregnancy.Thus, lower concentrations of inhaled anaesthetics may result in a loss of protective upper airway reflexes during the delivery of inspired concentration of anaesthetics that are usually considered safe.

CARDIOVASCULAR CHANGES
An increased demand for oxygen of the obese individuals results in an increased workload on the heart.The cardiac output and blood volume are increased.Each kilogram of fat contains 3,000 m of blood vessels.Other important problems are pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy, decreased LV contractility, supine hypotension syndrome, ECG changes shows LV strain, flat T waves and low-voltage QRS complex [Table 3].Different positions of a obese patient has effects on the lung volumes [Figure 3].

GASTROINTESTINAL CHANGES
Progesterone relaxes the smooth muscles.Consequently, it impairs oesophageal and intestinal motility during pregnancy.7] OBESITY-ASSOCIATED SYSTEM-WISE COMORBID CONDITIONS The following conditions are associated with obesity [Table 4].

MATERNAL COMPLICATIONS Hypertension
In a study of 4,100 deliveries in California, the prevalence of pregnancy-induced hypertension was 4.2% in normal weight women and increased to 9.1% in the obese women, the values being 1.2 and 5.3% for what the authors called hypertension. [18]The incidence of gestational hypertension increased from 4.8% in the normal weight group to 10.2% in the obese group (n = 1,473) and 12.3% in the morbidly obese group (n = 877). [19]stational diabetes In a study of 16,102 women, the incidence of Gestational diabetes (GDM) was 2.3% in the control group and increased to 6.3% in the obese group (OR 2.6) and 9.5% in the morbidly obese group (OR 4.0).[19] In a UK study, women with a BMI greater than 30 kg/ m 2 are 3.6-times more likely to develop GDM compared with women with a normal BMI.[2] Diabetes is associated with increasing overweight and obesity.Sixty percent of women have an unplanned pregnancy and may have undiagnosed diabetes.The pregnancy is at increased risk of foetal malformation in addition to foetal macrosomia.
Maternal deaths 18 th in a series of reports within the Confidential Enquiries into Maternal and Child Health (CEMACH) in the UK, in the years 2003-5, there were six women who died from problems directly related to anaesthesia, which is the same as the reported deaths in the 2000-2 triennium.Obesity was a factor in four of these women who died, indicating the magnitude of the problem. [20]ETAL COMPLICATIONS

Congenital malformations
One case-control study found that women with a BMI greater than 31 kg)/m 2 had a significantly increased risk of delivering infants with neural tube defect (NTD) and defects of the central nervous system.The increased risk of NTD in infants of obese women was thought to be related to the lower levels of folic acid that reach the embryo due to poor absorption and higher metabolic demands.

Macrosomia
Several studies have shown that maternal obesity and excessive weight gain during pregnancy are associated with macrosomic babies. [19,21]Obesity and pre-GDM are independently associated with an increased risk of large-for-gestational-age infants, and this impact of abnormal body habitus on birthweight increases with increasing BMI and is associated with significant obstetric morbidity. [22,23]romboembolism The risk of thromboembolism is increased in obese parturients.Edwards and others [24] reported 683 obese women (BMI > 29 kg/m 2 ) who were matched to 660 women of normal weight (BMI 19.8-26.0kg/m 2 ).The incidence of thromboembolism was 2.5% in the obese women and only 0.6% in the control subjects. [24]The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG) in the United Kingdom recommends thromboprophylaxis for 3-5 days using low-molecular weight heparin after vaginal delivery for women who are over the age of 35 years and have a pre-pregnancy or early pregnancy BMI >30 kg/m 2 or weight >90 kg. [25]In addition, the RCOG recommends thromboprophylaxis before and for 3-5 days following caesarean section for women with a prepregnancy or early pregnancy BMI >30 kg/m 2 or with a current weight >80 kg.The RCOG also recommends considering thromboprophylaxis in "extremely obese" women who are hospitalized antenatally. [25,26]

PRE-OPERATIVE ISSUES
A thorough pre-operative evaluation is essential to minimize surgical complications.All severely obese patients should undergo pre-operative chest radiograph, The pre-operative anaesthesia consult should include an assessment of airway and potential vascular access sites.If there is any evidence of pulmonary dysfunction, an arterial blood gas should be performed to identify patients with carbon dioxide retention and to determine the peri-operative oxygen requirements.Patients with significant pulmonary dysfunction should be evaluated by a pulmonologist pre-operatively.
Wound infection, deep venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism are all associated with obesity.
Pre-operative antibiotic prophylaxis with cefazolin or vancomycin should be given at least 30 min before skin incision to allow for adequate tissue penetration.
To prevent a venous thromboembolic event, pneumatic compression devices should be placed on the calves preoperatively.Place pneumatic compression stockings on the lower extremities of all obese parturients prior to and during surgery as prophylaxis against deep vein thrombosis, ensuring that the compression stockings remain in place until the patient is fully ambulatory.For short-out patient procedures, this is probably sufficient prophylaxis.For longer surgeries or surgeries performed under general anaesthesia, heparin prophylaxis is recommended.Most authors recommend unfractionated heparin 5,000 IU or lowmolecular weight heparin every 12 h starting before surgery and continuing until the patient is ambulatory.

CUFF SIZE FOR BLOOD PRESSURE
Another problem that the anaesthesiologist often encounters when dealing with morbidly obese patients is difficulty with non-invasive blood pressure monitoring.Unless the length of the cuff exceeds the circumference of the arm by 20%, systolic and diastolic blood pressure measurements may overestimate true maternal blood pressure.Direct arterial pressure measurement may be useful in the morbidly obese women where sphygmomanometry is often inaccurate, especially in patients with comorbidities such as chronic hypertension and pre-eclampsia.An intraarterial catheter also offers the advantage of having the opportunity to perform repeated blood gas sampling, if indicated.

OPERATING TABLE AND POSITION Operating table
Selection of appropriate operating table should occur before surgery.Standard operating tables can hold up to 450 lbs, but tables capable of holding up to 1,000 lbs are available and may be necessary for morbidly obese individuals.An appropriately sized operating table is imperative.The use of two operating tables (side by side) has been described. [27]The problem with this technique is that it is impossible to raise, lower or change the position of the tables in a completely synchronous manner.Another possibility is to use one set of arm boards, placed parallel to the operating table to extend the width of the table, while an extra set of arm boards can be used to position the arms of the patient.

Position
All morbidly obese patients undergoing caesarean section should be placed in a ramped position with left uterine displacement regardless of primary anaesthetic technique.The ramped position has been shown to improve the laryngoscopic view.The effect may be even more important for parturients with a large breast, which can obstruct the insertion of the laryngoscopic blade.In the ramped position, blankets are folded under the chest and head to achieve the horizontal alignment with external auditory meatus and sternal notch [Figure 4]. [28]This position aligns the oral, pharyngeal and tracheal access and frees the mandible to accommodate the tongue and the laryngoscopic blade.A 30° head-up position may minimize the impact on the respiratory mechanics and oxygenation.

Figure 4: Positioning
This PDF download is supported by MAQUET the makers of FLOW-i -Advancing Anesthesia ANAESTHESIA Caesarean section regional techniques Continuous lumbar epidural analgesia A higher percentage of morbidly obese parturients will require cesarean delivery compared with nonobese parturients.Epidural anaestheisa offers several advantages.First, the ability to titrate the dose to achieve the desired level of analgesia, ability to extend the block for prolonged surgery, a decreased incidence and, perhaps, slow speed of developing hypotension and utilization for post-operative analgesia.In obese parturients, the administration of local anaesthetic should be closely titrated using a small incremental dose.Epidural anaesthesia alone is usually well tolerated in the obese parturients.The level of analgesia should be carefully tested before the surgeon is allowed to begin the procedure.
Extending labour analgesia for caesarean section requires additional local anaesthetic of higher concentration than the dilute solutions used to provide labour analgesia.The level of anaesthesia required for caesarean section is at least T4-5.Following an injection of the test dose, many anaesthesiologists administer incremental doses of 2% lidocaine with epinephrine until the desired effect is attained.Bupivacaine 0.5% can also be used.
Prophylactic placement of an epidural catheter when not contraindicated in labouring morbidly obese women would potentially decrease the anaesthetic and perinatal complications associated with attempts at emergency provision of regional or general anaesthesia.

POSITION
The sitting position is more preferred because the line joining the occiput or the prominence of C7 and the gluteal cleft can be used to approximate the position of the midline sitting position, which allows the fat of the back to settle laterally and symmetrically and improves the identification of the midline.Morbidly obese woman tend to be more comfortable sitting on the side of the bed with a stool placed under their feet.
The horizontal lateral recumbent head-down position reduces the incidence of intravascular placement by reducing the venous congestion in the epidural veins. [30]MBER OF ATTEMPTS Jordan and others noted that 74.4% of these patients needed more than one attempt for successful epidural needle placement.

DURAL PUNCTURE
There is 4% incidence of dural puncture in morbidly obese parturients [31] EPIDURAL SPACE DISTANCE FROM SKIN Hamza and others [32] found that the distance from the skin to the epidural space was significantly shorter when the epidural was performed with the patient in a sitting position as compared with the lateral decubitus position. [33]Computed tomography (CT) was used to measure the depth of the epidural space in non-pregnant patients.It is sufficient to use a standard epidural needle for the first attempt.BMI is a poor predictor of distance to the epidural space. [34]ENTIFICATION OF MIDLINE

Patient assists
The parturient assists the anaesthesiologist verbally by indicating whether she feels the needle more on the left or on the right side of the spine, [35] which may prove to be a valuable tool when trying to identify the midline in these morbidly obese patients [Figure 5].
Needle help guide [36] uses an 8.5 cm 26 needle to probe for the posterior process of the lumbar vertebra.
When the lumbar process is located, it can be used as a landmark for epidural needle insertion.
In case difficult epidural placement is encountered, ultrasound image should be considered. [37,38]Grau and others suggested that the quality of images obtained with the paramedian longitudinal approach is superior This PDF download is supported by MAQUET the makers of FLOW-i -Advancing Anesthesia compared with images obtained with the transverse and median longitudinal approaches.The transverse approach is easier to perform.It is often difficult in obese patients to identify the shadow of the spinal process.Instead, the symmetry of the paraspinal muscles can be used.

CORRECT PLACEMENT OF CATHETER AND FIXATION
The risk of epidural catheter dislodgement is increased in obese patients.Sliding of skin over the subcutaneous tissue has been proposed as an important factor in epidural catheter migration. [39]Iwama and Katayama [40] noticed a 3 cm skin movement in some patients.To avoid the tendency of epidural catheter to walk, the catheter is placed 7 cm in the epidural space.Hamilton and others [41] demonstrated that the epidural catheter not fixed at the skin could move 1-2.5 cm inward when the parturient posture is changed from the sitting to the lateral recumbent position, with the greatest change seen in patients with BMI >30.Suturing the epidural catheter to the skin using an adhesive dressing has been recommended. [42]Nevertheless, the failure rate of the epidural catheter in the general obstetric population varies between 8% and 13%, [43,44] with major causes of failure being no analgesia.

COMBINED SPINAL EPIDURAL ANAESTHESIA
Combined spinal epidural anaesthesia (CSE) has become a well-established alternative to epidural analgesia.This provides a faster onset of effective pain relief and increases patient satisfaction.The potential drawback of CSE is that the location of the epidural catheter is initially uncertain.In an emergency, this unproven catheter may fail to provide adequate anaesthesia.On the other hand, studies [43,[45][46][47] have shown that catheter inserted as part of the CSE technique produces anaesthesia more reliably than that via a standard epidural technique.The appearance of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) at the hub of the spinal needle indirectly confirms the correct epidural needle placement.This increases the likelihood of a proper working catheter.Lower epidural analgesic requirements have been reported in obese parturients when compared with normal patients, probably secondary to a reduced volume in their epidural and subarchanoid space due to increased abdominal pressures. [48,49]INAL ANAESTHESIA Single-shot spinal anaesthesia remains the most common type of anaesthesia employed for delivery of the foetus by caesarean section.The advantage of using subarachnoid block includes a dense reliable block of rapid onset.However, technical difficulties comprises of potential for high spinal blockade, profound dense thoracic motor blockade leading to cardiorespiratory compromise and inability to prolong the blockade.It is widely believed that local anaesthetic requirements are lower in pregnant patients and that the duration of surgery may extend beyond the duration of singleshot spinal anaesthsia.In such cases, intra-operative induction of general anaesthesia is undesirable and potentially hazardous.

CONTINUOUS SPINAL ANALGESIA
With the unreliability of the epidural placement of the catheter, it is often preferred to conduct an intentional continuous spinal analgesia.Accidental dural puncture during epidural space identification can be converted as continuous spinal analgesia.This technique provides considerable predictability and reliability, allowing good control of the anaesthetic level and duration of block.The catheter is introduced 2-3 cm into the subarchanoid space.The low incidence of post-dural puncture headache may be attributed to the engorged extradural veins and the large amount of extradural fat, which reduce the CSF leak. [50]In a study, Michaloudis and others found that continuous spinal anaesthesia was useful for the peri-operative management of morbidly obese patients undergoing laparotomy for gastroplastic surgery.

GENERAL ANAESTHESIA CONSIDERATIONS
General anaesthesia imposes great discipline and plan on the part of the anaestheisologist in balancing the altered physiology and anatomy and, applying the pharmacological knowledge on a huge mass of fat, the anatomical and physiological changes caused by both obesity and pregnancy are less favorable to anaesthetists, resulting in an increased incidence of difficult intubation and rapid desaturation during the apnoeic phase.

AIRWAY ISSUES
A "difficult airway" has been defined as the clinical situation in which a conventionally trained anaesthesiologist experiences problems with mask ventilation, with tracheal intubation or with both. [51]54] EQUIPMENT FOR DIFFICULT INTUBATION Voyagis and others reported that difficult intubation increases with increasing BMI. [53]Factors that have been associated with difficult laryngoscopy include short sternomental distance, short thyromental distance, large neck circumference, limited head, neck and jaw movement, receding mandible and prominent teeth. [55,56]f these factors, only large neck circumference was associated with problematic intubation. [57]Logistic regression identified neck circumference as the best single predictor of problematic intubation.Neck circumference was measured at the level of the superior border of the cricothyroid cartilage.Problematic intubation was associated with increasing neck circumference and a Mallampati score of 3.

AIRWAY ASSESSMENT
Most airway catastrophes occur when airway difficulty is not recognized before induction of anaesthesia.Timely evaluation of the parturient's airway and adequate preparation to deal with the airway in the non-emergent setting are helpful in avoiding airway catastrophes.
There are a few simple pre-operative bedside determinations that can be performed quickly to evaluate the airway in a pregnant patient.These include, but are not limited to, mouth opening, Mallampati class, [58,59] thyromental distance and atlanto occipital extension.It is recommended that the airway be reassessed before induction of general anaesthesia. [60]e ability to protrude the mandible should be assessed.The ability of the lower incisors to protruded anterior to the upper incisors rarely poses difficulty in intubation. [61]

CAESAREAN SECTION IN ANTICIPATED DIFFICULT AIRWAY SITUATION
When a caesarean section has to be performed in an anticipated difficult situation, we are left with three options: awake intubation, regional anaesthesia and local anaesthesia.

AWAKE FIBEROPTIC INTUBATION
Full-aspiration prophylaxis should be instituted before intubation.An anticholinergic drying agent such as glycopyrrolate allows better application and absorption of local anaesthetics to the airway mucosa and thus improves visualization of the oropharyngeal structures.The route of fiberscopic intubation is important in pregnant patients.The nasal mucosa is engorged in pregnancy and, despite vasoconstriction, this can precipitate epistaxis, leading to a compromised airway.The oral route is commonly used and preferred.Topical anaesthesia is the primary anaesthetic for an awake intubation.It can be achieved with a spray of lidocaine at the base of the tongue and lateral pharyngeal walls along with application of lidocaine jelly to the base of the tongue via a tongue blade.Sufficient time must be allowed to anaesthetize all portions of the airway.This helps to minimize the swallowing and gag reflexes.The larynx and trachea can be topically anaesthetized by injection of lidocaine through the cricothyroid membrane or via the suction port of the fiberscope. [62]The patient is at risk for aspiration if regurgitation or vomiting takes place after topical anaesthesia and before the airway is secured.A shorter interval between application of topical anaesthesia and tracheal intubation lessens the potential of aspiration. [63]GIONAL ANAESTHESIA Regional anaesthesia is the best possible choice in most cases of anticipated difficult airway.Either spinal or epidural anaesthesia is acceptable, provided no contraindications exist in the absence of foetal compromise.When a caesarean section is nonemergent, epidural anaesthesia can be used.When time is limited, spinal anaesthesia is the choice.The advantages of regional anaesthesia include the following: the mother is awake and can protect her airway, airway manipulation is not necessary; the incidence of acid aspiration is decreased.If regional anaesthesia is administered to a patient with difficult airway, close monitoring by an experienced anaesthesiologist is essential.

LOCAL ANAESTHESIA
In the developing countries, this method is still used when the emergency condition of the parturient demands immediate intervention.In India, where there are certain communities with pseudocholenesterase deficiency, this poses a special problem.In those situations, succinyl choline is not given.Then, the anaesthesiologist is left with firbreoptic intubation or local anaesthesia.The awake mother has a protective airway.

CAESAREAN SECTION: UNANTICIPATED DIFFICULT AIRWAY
In a patient requiring an emergency caesarean section for foetal distress and failed intubation, management goals include maternal oxygenation, airway protection and prompt delivery of the baby.If possible, consider returning to spontaneous ventilation, awakening the mother and calling for help.

FAILED INITIAL ATTEMPTS AT INTUBATION
The recommendation in the case of a grade III laryngoscopic view is that no more than three attempts at laryngoscopy and intubation should be made.In a grade IV laryngoscopic view, the Difficult Airway Algorithm should be followed without delay. [64]Call for help immediately if surgery needs to be performed.

NON-EMERGENT PATHWAY: CAN VENTILATE, CANNOT INTUBATE SITUATION
In an elective caesarean where we can ventilate but cannot intubate, mask ventilation is continued with cricoid pressure until the patient is fully able to protect her airway.Adequate oxygenation without aspiration is the goal.

LARYNGEAL MASK AIRWAY
As per practice guidelines 2003 for difficult airway, Laryngeal mask airway (LMA) is the tool of choice in a can ventilate, cannot intubate (CVCI) situation.LMA has revolutionized management of difficult airway.LMA should be used earlier rather than later following failed endotracheal intubation.Han and colleagues reported the successful use of LMA as a ventillatory device in 1,060 of 1,067 patients for elective caesarean delivery. [65]n a German survey, LMAs were available in 91% of the obstetrics departments, similar to figures from the United Kingdom (91.4%).According to the same survey, 72% of the anaesthesiologists favoured LMA as the first treatment option for the CVCI situation. [66]n a survey in the United Kingdom, 71.8% of the obstetrical anaesthesiologists advocated use of LMA in a CVCI situation.Eight anaesthesiologists stated that LMA proved to be a "lifesaver". [67]Recently, 18 obstetrics units in Ireland were surveyed for difficult airway equipment.All of the units had LMA as an alternative device for ventilation and intubation.Fifty percent of the units also had an intubating laryngeal mask airway (ILMA) among their airway equipment. [68]ri and colleagues conducted a survey in Israel to evaluate the practices of Israeli anaesthetists regarding familiarity with airway devices.Ninety-six percent of the anaesthetists were skilled with LMAs and 73% with fiberoptics.Of the obstetrical rooms surveyed in this study, only 36% were equipped with laryngeal masks, 24% with fiberscopes and 22% with equipment for tracheal puncture. [69]OSEAL-LMA The design of the proseal-lma (PLMA) reliably allows positive pressure ventilation up to 30-40 cm H 2 O. Thus, the seal is 10 cm H 2 O higher, giving it greater ventillatory capability than the classic LMA.The PLMA has been successfully used in parturients after failed intubation during rapid-sequence induction. [63,70,71]MA ILMA has also been used in parturients after failed intubation. [72,73]RYNGEAL TUBE Laryngeal tube (LT) is a new supraglottic airway device.LT is a newer generation LT that is fitted with a second lumen for suctioning and gastric drainage.LTs has been recently used in a parturient having an urgent cesarean section in a CVCI situation. [72,74]

COMBITUBE
Combitube has been successfully used for the management of failed intubation in caesarean delivery. [75]ombitube provides as option for blind intubation of either the oesophagus or the trachea.In either position, the patient can be oxygenated and ventilated and the airway is protected against aspiration of gastric contents.Combitube is successfully used for the management of failed intubation in caesarean delivery. [75]RANSTRACHEAL JET VENTILLATION It is probably the fastest route to oxygenation in a desaturating patient.

FAILED INTUBATION DRILL
If the initial attempts to intubate the trachea fail, it is critical to follow a difficult air way algorithm [Figure 6].Focus on maternal oxygenation mask ventilation is best achieved with an oral airway and three people, one to apply cricoid pressure, a second to maximize jaw thrust and a third to squeeze the bag and monitor the patient.If ventilation fails, the team should insert a supraglottic air way device and prepare to create a surgical airway.The LMA is the preferred choice by many anaesthesiologists.In elective cases, fiberoptic intubation is considered.

GENERAL ANAESTHESIA PROCEDURE
General anaesthesia considerations: Prevention of acid aspiration and its related precautions It is standard practice to administer 30 ml of non-particulate antacid 0.3 M sodium citrate 30 min before the initiation of any anaesthetic being administered to the patient.9][80] PRE-OPERATIVE OXYGENATION Pre-oxygenation and denitrogenation is crucial in these patients before induction of general anaesthesia.The most common method is 3-5 min of 100% oxygen breathing.Baraka et al. [81] showed that pre-oxygenation achieved by eight deep breaths within 60 s at an oxygen flow of 10 L/min not only resulted in a higher PaO 2 but also in a slower haemoglobin desaturation compared with the four deep breathes technique.

INDUCTION AND MAINTENANCE
Induction may be achieved with pentothal sodium 4 mg/kg and up to 500 mg can be done as per the unit body weight.Prolonged duration of action is expected due to increased central volume distribution and prolonged elimination half-life.Intubation can be achieved with succinyl choline 1-1.5 mg/kg up to 200 mg.Plasma cholinesterase activity is increased in the obese requiring an initial larger dose.Capnography and  Isoflurane, sevoflurane and desflurane are all used in standard concentrations in obese parturients.Desflurane allows faster recovery when compared with sevoflurane.Dense intra-operative neuromuscular blockade is best achieved by titrating intermediate-acting agents using a twitch monitor.Emergence, extubation and recovery represent critical periods for obese woman who deliver under general anaesthesia.(1) To maximize the safety during this period, ensure adequate return of muscle function with a nerve stimulator and neostigmine reversal, (2) insert an orogastric tube to empty the stomach just before emergence, (3) delay extubation until the patient is completely awake and is able to meet the intensive care extubation criteria, (4) administer oxygen and (5) continue monitoring.

POST-OPERATIVE CARE
Obese parturients are at increased risk of post-operative complications such as hypoxaemia, atelectasis and pneumonia, deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism, pulmonary oedema, post-partum cardiomyopathy, post-operative endometritis and wound complications such as infection and dehiscence.[82,83]   Early mobilization, thromboprophylaxis, aggressive chest physiotherapy and adequate pain control are the key to the success of effective postoperative care.Nursing in the reclined position and oxygen supplementation can potentially reduce critical respiratory events.
Early mobilization has been shown to improve the respiratory volumes in the immediate post-operative phase. [84]Interestingly, Hood and Dewan found that, in morbidly obese women, all post-partum complications occurred in those undergoing caesarean section and not in those having vaginal delivery. [83]Pain control should be adequate in the post-operative period to facilitate mobilization and chest physiotherapy as it is one of the determinants of post-operative maternal morbidity.Epidural analgesia has been shown to improve the post-operative respiratory function in patients undergoing abdominal surgery. [85]Epidural infusion of local anaesthetic with opioids improves the quality of dynamic post-operative pain relief. [86]tient-controlled intravenous opioids have also been successfully used for post-operative pain relief in the morbidly obese. [87]Thromboembolic episodes remain the leading cause of direct maternal deaths in the UK.Obesity is a known independent risk factor for deep vein thrombosis.Both pharmacological and mechanical strategies are used for thromboprophylaxis, and an adequate dose of an anticoagulant for an appropriate duration is recommended.Obesity cardiomyopathy is a well-recognized clinical entity and at least three cases of peripartum cardiomyopathy in obese patients have been reported. [83,88,89]Wound complications occur more frequently in obese than in non-obese patients and often lead to prolonged recovery.They have been found to be increased with midline abdominal incision compared with Pfannenstiel incision. [90]ospital stay and costs have been found to be increased for morbidly obese patients after both vaginal delivery and caesarean section. [91]

GUIDELINES RECOMMENDED
All obstetric units should develop protocols for the management of morbidly obese women.These should include pre-assessment procedures, special community, ward and theatre equipment such as large sphygmomanometer cuffs, hoists, beds and operating tables and long regional block needles Morbidly obese women should be referred for anaesthetic assessment and advice as part of their antenatal care management by consultant anaesthetists is essential and difficulties with airway management and intubation should be anticipated.Positioning the women requires skill and sufficient manpower in the event of a requirement for induction of general anaesthesia is essential. [92]Direct arterial pressure measurement may be useful in the morbidly obese women where sphygmomanometry is often inaccurate.All morbidly obese women in childbirth should be given prophylactic lowmolecular weight heparin, and the duration of therapy needs to be determined in view of likely immobility.Thromboembolic stockings of an appropriate size need to be available.

FAT IS NOT A THREE-LETTERED WORD. IT KILLS THE WORLD
What is new obstetric anaesthesia?1. Ephedrine versus phenylephrine to treat hypotension after spinal anaesthesia: investigators compared varying combinations of the two drugs given by infusion to keep the blood pressure at baseline.Haemodynamic control was better for the mother and acid-base status was better in the foetus when phenylephrine was used instead of ephedrine.2. Low-dose bupivacaine with phenylephrine provided the best haemodynamic stability during subarachnoid block.3. Mallampati classification is not static and should be assessed just before instrumentation.Mallampati score ≥3 and large neck circumferences were most useful and it is suggested that neck circumference should be included in our pre-operative assessment.4. Oxytocin bolus produced hypotension, tachycardia, chest pain and signs of myocardial ischaemia on 12lead ECG.Oxytocin is not safe to give as an IV bolus. 5. Embolism remains the #1 cause of maternal death in the US. 6. Spinal anaesthesia is preferred in severe preeclampsia.

Figure 2 :Figure 3 :
Figure 2: Effect of obesity on lung volumes and closing pressure (Errol Lobo)

Table 4 : Obesity-associated system-wise comorbid conditions System Clinical manifestation
Understanding the nature of involvement of the various systems helps in planning the management of obese parturients.This PDF

download is supported by MAQUET the makers of FLOW-i -Advancing Anesthesia electro
cardiogram (EKG) and laboratory screening with a complete blood count, liver function tests, electrolyte panel, coagulation profile and urine analysis.A preoperative cardiology consult is highly recommended.Patients with severe obesity and no further cardiac risk factors should be placed on a peri-operative beta blocker, whereas those with identifiable cardiac risk factors should undergo additional non-invasive cardiac testing pre-operatively.

This PDF download is supported by MAQUET the makers of FLOW-i -Advancing Anesthesia bilateral
lung auscultation should be used to confirm successful intubation before surgical incision.Patients with morbid obesity experience further decrease in FRC under general anaesthesia.Techniques to maintain oxygenation include (1) increase tidal volume to 12-15 ml/kg, (2) increase FIO 2 >50%, (3) head up and (4) panniculus suspension.