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Towards precision critical care management of blood pressure in hemorrhagic stroke patients using dynamic linear models

Finding optimal blood pressure (BP) target and BP treatment after acute ischemic or hemorrhagic strokes is an area of controversy and a significant unmet need in the critical care of stroke victims. Numerous large prospective clinical trials have been done to address this question but have generated...

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Autores principales: Liu, Yuzhe, Manners, Jody, Bittar, Yazan, Chou, Sherry H-Y., Gopalakrishnan, Vanathi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6681940/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31381589
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220283
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author Liu, Yuzhe
Manners, Jody
Bittar, Yazan
Chou, Sherry H-Y.
Gopalakrishnan, Vanathi
author_facet Liu, Yuzhe
Manners, Jody
Bittar, Yazan
Chou, Sherry H-Y.
Gopalakrishnan, Vanathi
author_sort Liu, Yuzhe
collection PubMed
description Finding optimal blood pressure (BP) target and BP treatment after acute ischemic or hemorrhagic strokes is an area of controversy and a significant unmet need in the critical care of stroke victims. Numerous large prospective clinical trials have been done to address this question but have generated neutral or conflicting results. One major limitation that may have contributed to so many neutral or conflicting clinical trial results is the “one-size fit all” approach to BP targets, while the optimal BP target likely varies between individuals. We address this problem with the Acute Intervention Model of Blood Pressure (AIM-BP) framework: an individualized, human interpretable model of BP and its control in the acute care setting. The framework consists of two components: one, a model of BP homeostasis and the various effects that perturb it; and two, a parameter estimator that can learn clinically important model parameters on a patient by patient basis. By estimating the parameters of the AIM-BP model for a given patient, the effectiveness of antihypertensive medication can be quantified separately from the patient’s spontaneous BP trends. We hypothesize that the AIM-BP is a sufficient framework for estimating parameters of a homeostasis perturbation model of a stroke patient’s BP time course and the AIM-BP parameter estimator can do so as accurately and consistently as a state-of-the-art maximum likelihood estimation method. We demonstrate that this is the case in a proof of concept of the AIM-BP framework, using simulated clinical scenarios modeled on stroke patients from real world intensive care datasets.
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spelling pubmed-66819402019-08-15 Towards precision critical care management of blood pressure in hemorrhagic stroke patients using dynamic linear models Liu, Yuzhe Manners, Jody Bittar, Yazan Chou, Sherry H-Y. Gopalakrishnan, Vanathi PLoS One Research Article Finding optimal blood pressure (BP) target and BP treatment after acute ischemic or hemorrhagic strokes is an area of controversy and a significant unmet need in the critical care of stroke victims. Numerous large prospective clinical trials have been done to address this question but have generated neutral or conflicting results. One major limitation that may have contributed to so many neutral or conflicting clinical trial results is the “one-size fit all” approach to BP targets, while the optimal BP target likely varies between individuals. We address this problem with the Acute Intervention Model of Blood Pressure (AIM-BP) framework: an individualized, human interpretable model of BP and its control in the acute care setting. The framework consists of two components: one, a model of BP homeostasis and the various effects that perturb it; and two, a parameter estimator that can learn clinically important model parameters on a patient by patient basis. By estimating the parameters of the AIM-BP model for a given patient, the effectiveness of antihypertensive medication can be quantified separately from the patient’s spontaneous BP trends. We hypothesize that the AIM-BP is a sufficient framework for estimating parameters of a homeostasis perturbation model of a stroke patient’s BP time course and the AIM-BP parameter estimator can do so as accurately and consistently as a state-of-the-art maximum likelihood estimation method. We demonstrate that this is the case in a proof of concept of the AIM-BP framework, using simulated clinical scenarios modeled on stroke patients from real world intensive care datasets. Public Library of Science 2019-08-05 /pmc/articles/PMC6681940/ /pubmed/31381589 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220283 Text en © 2019 Liu et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ 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 author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Liu, Yuzhe
Manners, Jody
Bittar, Yazan
Chou, Sherry H-Y.
Gopalakrishnan, Vanathi
Towards precision critical care management of blood pressure in hemorrhagic stroke patients using dynamic linear models
title Towards precision critical care management of blood pressure in hemorrhagic stroke patients using dynamic linear models
title_full Towards precision critical care management of blood pressure in hemorrhagic stroke patients using dynamic linear models
title_fullStr Towards precision critical care management of blood pressure in hemorrhagic stroke patients using dynamic linear models
title_full_unstemmed Towards precision critical care management of blood pressure in hemorrhagic stroke patients using dynamic linear models
title_short Towards precision critical care management of blood pressure in hemorrhagic stroke patients using dynamic linear models
title_sort towards precision critical care management of blood pressure in hemorrhagic stroke patients using dynamic linear models
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6681940/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31381589
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220283
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