Coordinate with obstetrics, neonatal, anesthesia, critical care, and cardiology teams.
- Prioritize continuous high-quality CPR and left uterine displacement
- Goal: optimize maternal circulation and improve fetal outcomes
A fast, modern overview of the maternal cardiac arrest pathway—BLS/ACLS continuation, team assembly, airway and oxygenation, obstetric actions, and when to perform perimortem cesarean delivery.
Educational only—follow institutional protocols and a licensed clinician’s direction.
Coordinate with obstetrics, neonatal, anesthesia, critical care, and cardiology teams.
Category | Examples / Notes | Learn more |
---|---|---|
Anesthetic complications | Airway events, local anesthetic systemic toxicity | Anesthesia |
Bleeding | Postpartum hemorrhage, DIC | Obstetric hemorrhage |
Cardiovascular | MI, cardiomyopathy, aortic dissection | Cardiovascular |
Drugs | Toxicity, overdose | Toxicology |
Embolic | Amniotic fluid embolism, PE | Pulmonary Embolism |
H’s & T’s | Standard reversible causes (hypoxia, hypovolemia, tension pneumothorax, etc.) | ACLS review |
Hypertension | Severe preeclampsia/eclampsia, intracranial hemorrhage | Preeclampsia |
If ROSC is not achieved within ~5 minutes, proceed with PMCD when resources/skills permit. The goal is to relieve aortocaval compression and improve maternal perfusion; neonatal team should be ready to receive the newborn.
Each keyword links to the main website or a related post on gyathshammha.com.
During maternal cardiac arrest, prioritize high-quality CPR, prompt defibrillation when indicated, left uterine displacement, and parallel maternal/obstetric interventions. If there’s no ROSC within ~5 minutes, proceed to PMCD while the neonatal team prepares for delivery.
This guide is for education only and does not replace clinical judgment or local protocols.