Obstetrics

Amniotic Fluid Embolism (AFE)

A Comprehensive Article

Obstetric Emergencies

Amniotic Fluid Embolism (AFE) is a sudden, unpredictable obstetric emergency in which amniotic fluid, fetal cells, or debris enter the maternal circulation, triggering a severe systemic inflammatory and anaphylactoid reaction. This leads to: acute cardiorespiratory collapse, and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). ⚠️ AFE is not a true embolism like a pulmonary thromboembolism — it's primarily an immune-mediated reaction to amniotic components.

Definition

Amniotic Fluid Embolism (AFE) is a sudden, unpredictable obstetric emergency in which amniotic fluid, fetal cells, or debris enter the maternal circulation, triggering a severe systemic inflammatory and anaphylactoid reaction.

This leads to:

  • Acute cardiorespiratory collapse, and
  • Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC).

⚠️ AFE is not a true embolism like a pulmonary thromboembolism — it's primarily an immune-mediated reaction to amniotic components.

Incidence

  • Very rare: approximately 1 in 20,000–50,000 deliveries.
  • Maternal mortality: 20–60%.
  • Fetal mortality: 20–30%.
  • Occurs most commonly during labour, delivery, or immediately postpartum.

Pathophysiology (Simplified)

  1. Amniotic fluid or fetal debris (e.g., squamous cells, lanugo, vernix) enters maternal veins — usually via:
    • Uterine veins,
    • Placental bed tears,
    • Cervical veins, or
    • Uterine trauma.
  2. These substances act as foreign antigens, triggering a massive anaphylactoid (immune) response → release of vasoactive mediators.
  3. This leads to:
    • Pulmonary vasospasm and hypertension → right heart failure → hypoxia.
    • Left heart failure → pulmonary edema → shock.
    • Activation of coagulation cascadeDIC → uncontrolled bleeding.

Risk Factors

While AFE is largely unpredictable, certain conditions may increase risk:

Maternal / Labour Factors Examples
Uterine rupture Tears allow amniotic fluid into circulation
Placental abruption Damaged placental bed vessels
Rapid or tumultuous labour High intrauterine pressure
Multiparity Uterine vascular changes
Cesarean or instrumental delivery Trauma to uterine veins
Induction or augmentation with oxytocin Overstimulation of uterus
Polyhydramnios or multiple pregnancy Increased fluid volume
Advanced maternal age >35 years

However, AFE can occur even in normal, uncomplicated labours — hence the importance of vigilance.

Clinical Presentation

AFE usually presents suddenly and dramatically — often in a woman who seemed stable moments before.

Classic Triad

  1. Sudden cardiovascular collapse — hypotension, shock
  2. Respiratory distress — dyspnea, cyanosis, pulmonary edema
  3. Coagulopathy (DIC) — bleeding from puncture sites or vagina

Classic Triad

  1. Sudden cardiovascular collapse — hypotension, shock
  2. Respiratory distress — dyspnea, cyanosis, pulmonary edema
  3. Coagulopathy (DIC) — bleeding from puncture sites or vagina

Typical Sequence of Events

  1. Prodromal symptoms (seconds to minutes):
    • Sudden anxiety, restlessness
    • Feeling of doom
    • Breathlessness, cough
    • Chills or agitation
  2. Collapse phase:
    • Sudden dyspnea, cyanosis, hypotension
    • Cardiac arrest may occur within minutes
    • Seizures or loss of consciousness
  3. Hemorrhagic phase:
    • If the mother survives initial collapse → develops massive bleeding due to DIC
    • Oozing from venipuncture sites, gums, uterus (often mistaken for PPH)

Diagnosis

There is no single confirmatory test — AFE is a clinical diagnosis based on:

  • Sudden cardiovascular collapse,
  • Hypoxia, and
  • Coagulopathy in temporal relation to labour or delivery.

Investigations (Supportive)

  • Arterial blood gas: severe hypoxemia, metabolic acidosis.
  • Coagulation profile: prolonged PT, aPTT, low fibrinogen, thrombocytopenia (DIC).
  • Chest X-ray: pulmonary edema.
  • ECG: right heart strain pattern.
  • Autopsy finding: fetal squamous cells or mucin in pulmonary vasculature (confirmatory post-mortem only).

Investigations (Supportive)

  • Arterial blood gas: severe hypoxemia, metabolic acidosis.
  • Coagulation profile: prolonged PT, aPTT, low fibrinogen, thrombocytopenia (DIC).
  • Chest X-ray: pulmonary edema.
  • ECG: right heart strain pattern.
  • Autopsy finding: fetal squamous cells or mucin in pulmonary vasculature (confirmatory post-mortem only).

Management

There is no specific cure — management is supportive and resuscitative.

The focus: restore oxygenation, support circulation, and correct coagulopathy.

Step 1 – Immediate Resuscitation

  • Call for help — obstetric, anesthetic, critical care, and neonatal teams.
  • Ensure airway, breathing, circulation (ABC).

Airway & Breathing:

  • Administer 100% oxygen.
  • Intubate and ventilate if respiratory failure.

Circulation:

  • IV access (2 large-bore lines) → rapid infusion of crystalloids or blood products.
  • Start vasopressors/inotropes (e.g., dopamine, noradrenaline) to maintain BP.

Step 2 – Manage Coagulopathy (DIC)

  • Replace blood and clotting factors:
    • Fresh frozen plasma (FFP)
    • Cryoprecipitate
    • Platelets
    • Packed RBCs
  • Monitor coagulation profile frequently.
  • Tranexamic acid may be used to reduce bleeding (if not contraindicated).

Step 3 – Deliver the Baby

  • If cardiac arrest or severe collapse occurs before delivery:
    • Perform perimortem cesarean section (within 4–5 minutes of arrest) to:
      • Save the baby, and
      • Improve maternal resuscitation (reduces aortocaval compression).
  • If the mother stabilizes and baby not yet born → proceed with urgent delivery (CS or vaginal, depending on progress).

Step 4 – Ongoing Intensive Care

  • Transfer to ICU once stabilized.
  • Continue mechanical ventilation, fluid balance, and hemodynamic monitoring.
  • Treat secondary complications:
    • Pulmonary edema
    • ARDS
    • Renal failure
    • Sepsis

Step 1 – Immediate Resuscitation

  • Call for help — obstetric, anesthetic, critical care, and neonatal teams.
  • Ensure airway, breathing, circulation (ABC).

Airway & Breathing:

  • Administer 100% oxygen.
  • Intubate and ventilate if respiratory failure.

Circulation:

  • IV access (2 large-bore lines) → rapid infusion of crystalloids or blood products.
  • Start vasopressors/inotropes (e.g., dopamine, noradrenaline) to maintain BP.

Airway & Breathing:

  • Administer 100% oxygen.
  • Intubate and ventilate if respiratory failure.

Circulation:

  • IV access (2 large-bore lines) → rapid infusion of crystalloids or blood products.
  • Start vasopressors/inotropes (e.g., dopamine, noradrenaline) to maintain BP.

Step 2 – Manage Coagulopathy (DIC)

  • Replace blood and clotting factors:
    • Fresh frozen plasma (FFP)
    • Cryoprecipitate
    • Platelets
    • Packed RBCs
  • Monitor coagulation profile frequently.
  • Tranexamic acid may be used to reduce bleeding (if not contraindicated).

Step 3 – Deliver the Baby

  • If cardiac arrest or severe collapse occurs before delivery:
    • Perform perimortem cesarean section (within 4–5 minutes of arrest) to:
      • Save the baby, and
      • Improve maternal resuscitation (reduces aortocaval compression).
  • If the mother stabilizes and baby not yet born → proceed with urgent delivery (CS or vaginal, depending on progress).

Step 4 – Ongoing Intensive Care

  • Transfer to ICU once stabilized.
  • Continue mechanical ventilation, fluid balance, and hemodynamic monitoring.
  • Treat secondary complications:
    • Pulmonary edema
    • ARDS
    • Renal failure
    • Sepsis

Prognosis

Outcome Statistics / Notes
Maternal mortality 20–60% despite advanced care
Fetal mortality 20–30% (due to acute hypoxia)
Neurological damage Common in survivors of prolonged arrest
Recurrence Extremely rare (AFE is not hereditary)

Survivors may have long-term cardiac or neurological complications.

Prevention

  • No guaranteed preventive measure, as AFE is unpredictable.
  • However:
    • Avoid unnecessary uterine trauma during labour or delivery.
    • Manage labour carefully in high-risk women (multiparas, polyhydramnios, cesarean).
    • Ensure immediate access to resuscitation and blood products in all maternity units.

Summary (High-Yield Points)

  • AFE = sudden cardiovascular collapse + hypoxia + DIC during labour or postpartum.
  • Mechanism: immune/anaphylactoid reaction to amniotic fluid entering maternal circulation.
  • Classic triad: respiratory distress, hypotension/shock, bleeding (DIC).
  • Diagnosis: clinical — no definitive test.
  • Management:
    • Immediate ABC resuscitation.
    • Oxygen and mechanical ventilation.
    • Blood and coagulation factor replacement.
    • Emergency delivery if cardiac arrest.
  • Outcome: high mortality — time is critical.