Myomectomy
Anesthesia type

General vs Neuraxial

Airway

ETT vs LMA vs non-invasive O2

Lines and access

PIV x 2 (at least 1 large bore), +/- arterial line

Monitors

Standard, 5-lead EKG, temperature

Primary anesthetic considerations
Preoperative
Intraoperative

Hemorrohage, uterine rupture

Postoperative

PONV

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Myomectomy is a surgical procedure involving the removal of parts of the muscular layers of the uterus. Indications include abnormal bleeding, infertility, and pain[1]

Preoperative management

Patient evaluation

System Considerations
Respiratory
Gastrointestinal
Hematologic Assess for anemia secondary to menorrhagia
Renal
Endocrine
Other

Labs and studies

  • Type and screen

Patient preparation and premedication

  • IV midazolam for anxiety
  • PO Acetaminophen for pain
  • Scopolamine patch for PONV

Regional and neuraxial techniques

  • Spinal and/or epidural

Intraoperative management

Monitoring and access

  • Standard ASA monitors
  • 5-lead EKG
  • +/- arterial depending size/extent of myomectomy
  • PIV x 2 ( at least 1 large bore)

Induction and airway management

  • If general is chosen, standard induction
    • ETT vs LMA
  • If neuraxial is chosen, minimal to deep sedation is reasonable

Positioning

  • Lithotomy (vaginal approach)
  • Supine (open approach)
  • Steep Trendelenburg (laparoscopic approach)

Maintenance and surgical considerations

  • Maintenance with volatile anesthetic supplemented with opioid analgesic
    • Consider TIVA is high risk for PONV
    • Maintain neuromuscular blockade if laparoscopy
  • Monitor blood loss, transfuse if needed

Emergence

  • PONV prophylaxis

Postoperative management

Disposition

  • PACU
  • Usually discharged home

Pain management

  • Pain is mild to severe depending on surgical approach
    • Multimodal analgesia
      • IV/PO acetominophen
      • IV/PO opioids
      • Local anesthetic at trocar sites
      • TAP blocks
      • Epidural analgesia

Potential complications

  • Bleeding
  • Uterine rupture
  • Bowel/bladder injury

Procedure variants

Open myomectomy Laparscopic myomectomy Vaginal myomectomy
Unique considerations
Position Supine Steep Trendelenburg Lithotomy
Surgical time
EBL
Postoperative disposition Floor
Pain management Severe, multimodal, consider epidural Mild to moderate, multimodal Mild to moderate, multimodal
Potential complications Bowel/bladder injury, bleeding Bowel/bladder injury Uterine rupture

References

  1. Anesthesiologist's manual of surgical procedures. Richard A. Jaffe, Clifford A. Schmiesing, Brenda Golianu (Sixth edition ed.). Philadelphia. 2020. ISBN 978-1-4698-2916-6. OCLC 1117874404. |edition= has extra text (help)CS1 maint: others (link)