Hip Fracture Clinical Trial
Official title:
Association Between Heart Rate Variability and Perioperative and Long-term Mortality in Patients With Hip Fracture - an Observational Study
165 patients admitted to two hospitals were included and short-time HRV measurements were obtained. Mortality data were gathered from the Norwegian central address register. Patients, close relatives of patients and in some cases their general physicians or nursery home physicians were interviewed six months postoperatively regarding the incidence of pneumonia, cardiac events or stroke.
Patients with hip fractures admitted to Kongsberg hospital and o Oslo University Hospital
between 2008 and 2013 were invited to participate in the study. Hemodynamically unstable
patients, patients where it was impossible to obtain a 5 or 10-minute ECG signal (e.g. due to
delirium), patients having undergone surgery the last month, cancer patients, patients with
hip fractures due to high energy trauma, and patients considered moribund at admission, were
excluded. A 5-10-minute ECG signal was recorded within 24 hours after arrival preoperatively
and digitalized.
Heart rate was obtained by a Biocom 3000 ECG recorder (Kongsberg) and a Biocom 4000 ECG
recorder (Oslo). The Biocom 3000 and 4000 ECG interface units use dry silver/ silver chloride
ECG electrodes attached to the index fingers of the right and the left hand, respectively.
Participants were asked to relax for 5 minutes. Afterwards, they were connected to the ECG,
and a continuous ECG signal was obtained over 10 minutes (Kongsberg) or 5 minutes (Oslo).
Linear parameters (time domain: SDNN, rMSSD; frequency domain: HF, LF, VLF, LF/HF) were
calculated by a Heart Rhythm Scanner - Version 2.0 - (Biocom Technologies - U.S.A). Both
signal measurement and processing was done according to international recommendations.
The investigators analysed HRV both in time domain and frequency domain. Time domain analysis
measures the intervals between successive normal cardiac cycles. SDNN (the standard deviation
of the NN intervals) reflects all the cyclic components responsible for variability in the
period of recording and correlates strongly with total power (TP) of the frequency domain.
rMSSD (root mean square successive difference) is calculated by drawing the square root of
the mean value of the squared NN intervals. In healthy persons, the rMSSD value is 27 ± 12
ms. It estimates high-frequency variations in heart rate and correlates accordingly mostly
with HF in the frequency domain. Changes in this parameter might show a decreased
parasympathetic tone and discordance in sympathovagal activity.
Frequency domain (power spectral density) analysis describes the periodic oscillations of the
heart rate signal, decomposed at different frequencies and amplitudes, and provides
information on the amount of their relative intensity (termed variance of power) in the sinus
rhythm of the heart. It is calculated with help of power spectral density by the fast Fourier
transformation. Frequently reported indices are TP (total power), VLF (very low frequency
power, < 0.003 -0.04 Hz), LF (low-frequency power, 0.04-0.15 Hz), HF (high-frequency power,
0.15-0.4 Hz), and the LF/HF ratio. It is recommended not to calculate VLF values from
recordings lasting five minutes or less because VLF has a cycle period of 20 seconds to 5
minutes The measurement period should be at least twice as long as the cycle duration. The
investigators therefore used only time series of 10 minutes (from the Kongsberg group) for
calculation of VLF.
All ECGs were manually edited according to the Task force of the European Society of
cardiology. If containing more than 30% pathological QRS-complexes, the patients' data were
excluded.
The sample size was estimated according to reference values reported earlier. The calculation
was based on mortality as the most important outcome. Assuming very conservatively a 6-months
mortality between 3 and 8%, 150 patients would be sufficient to test the hypothesis that
there is a significant association between linear HRV-measurements and mortality. However,
the investigators also addressed other incidents than mortality, most of which occur more
frequently.
In the statistical analysis, the investigators used the independent samples T test for
univariate analysis and ANOVA for multivariate analysis. For nominal data, the Chi-Square
test or Fisher's exact test were used, as appropriate. In case of very different group sizes
(in the case of postoperative pneumonia) the investigators used the nonparametric
Mann-Whitney-U-test. Statistical analyses were run by the Statistical Package for Social
Sciences (SPSS), release 18.0.3 (September 2010). Values are given in mean +/- SEM if not
otherwise stated.
Every person in Norway is identified by a unique number in the Central Personal Register.
Deceased patients were identified by the Norwegian central address register which provides
exact data for the time of death. In addition, patients, close relatives of patients and in
some cases their general physicians or nursing home physicians were interviewed six months
postoperatively in the Kongsberg group regarding pneumonia, cardiac events and stroke. In the
Oslo group patients, close relatives of patients and in some cases their general physicians
or nursing home physicians were interviewed regarding pneumonia, cardiac events and stroke
within the first six months postoperatively. In both groups the results of the interviews
were cross-validated by the hospital journals and - if relevant - nursery home journals
regarding new hospital admissions within six months after the operation date.
The study protocol was reviewed and approved of the Regional Committee for Medical and Health
Research Ethics of Southern Norway (11.1.2008, S-07307b) and the Data Protection Officer of
Oslo University Hospital.
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