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Accuracy of invasive arterial pressure monitoring in cardiovascular patients: an observational study

INTRODUCTION: Critically ill patients and patients undergoing high-risk and major surgery, are instrumented with intra-arterial catheters and invasive blood pressure is considered the “gold standard” for arterial pressure monitoring. Nonetheless, artifacts due to inappropriate dynamic response of th...

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Autores principales: Romagnoli, Stefano, Ricci, Zaccaria, Quattrone, Diego, Tofani, Lorenzo, Tujjar, Omar, Villa, Gianluca, Romano, Salvatore M, De Gaudio, A Raffaele
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4279904/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25433536
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13054-014-0644-4
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author Romagnoli, Stefano
Ricci, Zaccaria
Quattrone, Diego
Tofani, Lorenzo
Tujjar, Omar
Villa, Gianluca
Romano, Salvatore M
De Gaudio, A Raffaele
author_facet Romagnoli, Stefano
Ricci, Zaccaria
Quattrone, Diego
Tofani, Lorenzo
Tujjar, Omar
Villa, Gianluca
Romano, Salvatore M
De Gaudio, A Raffaele
author_sort Romagnoli, Stefano
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Critically ill patients and patients undergoing high-risk and major surgery, are instrumented with intra-arterial catheters and invasive blood pressure is considered the “gold standard” for arterial pressure monitoring. Nonetheless, artifacts due to inappropriate dynamic response of the fluid-filled monitoring systems may lead to clinically relevant differences between actual and displayed pressure values. We sought to analyze the incidence and causes of resonance/underdamping phenomena in patients undergoing major vascular and cardiac surgery. METHODS: Arterial pressures were measured invasively and, according to the fast-flush Gardner’s test, each patient was attributed to one of two groups depending on the presence (R-group) or absence (NR-group) of resonance/underdamping. Invasive pressure values were then compared with the non-invasive ones. RESULTS: A total of 11,610 pulses and 1,200 non-invasive blood pressure measurements were analyzed in 300 patients. Ninety-two out of 300 (30.7%) underdamping/resonance arterial signals were found. In these cases (R-group) systolic invasive blood pressure (IBP) average overestimation of non-invasive blood pressure (NIBP) was 28.5 (15.9) mmHg (P <0.0001) while in the NR-group the overestimation was 4.1(5.3) mmHg (P <0.0001). The mean IBP-NIBP difference in diastolic pressure in the R-group was −2.2 (10.6) mmHg and, in the NR-group −1.1 (5.8) mmHg. The mean arterial pressure difference was 7.4 (11.2) mmHg in the R-group and 2.3 (6.4) mmHg in the NR-group. A multivariate logistic regression identified five parameters independently associated with underdamping/resonance: polydistrectual arteriopathy (P =0.0023; OR = 2.82), history of arterial hypertension (P =0.0214; OR = 2.09), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (P =0.198; OR = 2.61), arterial catheter diameter (20 vs. 18 gauge) (P <0.0001; OR = 0.35) and sedation (P =0.0131; OR = 0.5). The ROC curve for the maximal pressure–time ratio, showed an optimum selected cut-off point of 1.67 mmHg/msec with a specificity of 97% (95% CI: 95.13 to 99.47%) and a sensitivity of 77% (95% CI: 67.25 to 85.28%) and an area under the ROC curve by extended trapezoidal rule of 0.88. CONCLUSION: Physicians should be aware of the possibility that IBP can be inaccurate in a consistent number of patients due to underdamping/resonance phenomena. NIBP measurement may help to confirm/exclude the presence of this artifact avoiding inappropriate treatments.
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spelling pubmed-42799042015-01-22 Accuracy of invasive arterial pressure monitoring in cardiovascular patients: an observational study Romagnoli, Stefano Ricci, Zaccaria Quattrone, Diego Tofani, Lorenzo Tujjar, Omar Villa, Gianluca Romano, Salvatore M De Gaudio, A Raffaele Crit Care Research INTRODUCTION: Critically ill patients and patients undergoing high-risk and major surgery, are instrumented with intra-arterial catheters and invasive blood pressure is considered the “gold standard” for arterial pressure monitoring. Nonetheless, artifacts due to inappropriate dynamic response of the fluid-filled monitoring systems may lead to clinically relevant differences between actual and displayed pressure values. We sought to analyze the incidence and causes of resonance/underdamping phenomena in patients undergoing major vascular and cardiac surgery. METHODS: Arterial pressures were measured invasively and, according to the fast-flush Gardner’s test, each patient was attributed to one of two groups depending on the presence (R-group) or absence (NR-group) of resonance/underdamping. Invasive pressure values were then compared with the non-invasive ones. RESULTS: A total of 11,610 pulses and 1,200 non-invasive blood pressure measurements were analyzed in 300 patients. Ninety-two out of 300 (30.7%) underdamping/resonance arterial signals were found. In these cases (R-group) systolic invasive blood pressure (IBP) average overestimation of non-invasive blood pressure (NIBP) was 28.5 (15.9) mmHg (P <0.0001) while in the NR-group the overestimation was 4.1(5.3) mmHg (P <0.0001). The mean IBP-NIBP difference in diastolic pressure in the R-group was −2.2 (10.6) mmHg and, in the NR-group −1.1 (5.8) mmHg. The mean arterial pressure difference was 7.4 (11.2) mmHg in the R-group and 2.3 (6.4) mmHg in the NR-group. A multivariate logistic regression identified five parameters independently associated with underdamping/resonance: polydistrectual arteriopathy (P =0.0023; OR = 2.82), history of arterial hypertension (P =0.0214; OR = 2.09), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (P =0.198; OR = 2.61), arterial catheter diameter (20 vs. 18 gauge) (P <0.0001; OR = 0.35) and sedation (P =0.0131; OR = 0.5). The ROC curve for the maximal pressure–time ratio, showed an optimum selected cut-off point of 1.67 mmHg/msec with a specificity of 97% (95% CI: 95.13 to 99.47%) and a sensitivity of 77% (95% CI: 67.25 to 85.28%) and an area under the ROC curve by extended trapezoidal rule of 0.88. CONCLUSION: Physicians should be aware of the possibility that IBP can be inaccurate in a consistent number of patients due to underdamping/resonance phenomena. NIBP measurement may help to confirm/exclude the presence of this artifact avoiding inappropriate treatments. BioMed Central 2014-11-30 2014 /pmc/articles/PMC4279904/ /pubmed/25433536 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13054-014-0644-4 Text en © Romagnoli et al.; licensee BioMed Central. 2014 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
Romagnoli, Stefano
Ricci, Zaccaria
Quattrone, Diego
Tofani, Lorenzo
Tujjar, Omar
Villa, Gianluca
Romano, Salvatore M
De Gaudio, A Raffaele
Accuracy of invasive arterial pressure monitoring in cardiovascular patients: an observational study
title Accuracy of invasive arterial pressure monitoring in cardiovascular patients: an observational study
title_full Accuracy of invasive arterial pressure monitoring in cardiovascular patients: an observational study
title_fullStr Accuracy of invasive arterial pressure monitoring in cardiovascular patients: an observational study
title_full_unstemmed Accuracy of invasive arterial pressure monitoring in cardiovascular patients: an observational study
title_short Accuracy of invasive arterial pressure monitoring in cardiovascular patients: an observational study
title_sort accuracy of invasive arterial pressure monitoring in cardiovascular patients: an observational study
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4279904/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25433536
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13054-014-0644-4
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