Hypotension Clinical Trial
Official title:
Can Continuous Cardiac Output Monitoring Before General Anesthesia Predict Hypotension After Induction?
Post-induction hypotension (PIH) is very common with high incidence about 9-60%. There are
multiple factors that may cause PIH, like pre-operative fasting, bowel preparation,
vasodilatation due to anesthetics, and reduced stimulation during preparation before
incision. Hypotension could cause tissue hypoperfusion, ischemia and higher risk for stroke
or myocardial infarction, which result in higher risk for prolonged hospital stay or death.
In general surgical patients, lower pre-induction SAP, older age (>50 years old), and
emergency surgery are independently associated with PIH. In this study, we would like to use
a wireless continuous non-invasive sonography device to evaluate if the change of cardiac
output during the perioperative period could predict PIH.
We would like to enroll 80 patients of ASA class I to III who undergo abdominal surgery.
GIS-Heartio® will be used to estimate the cardiac parameters one day before the surgery (Day
0) and after the patient enter the operation room till wound incision. Passive leg raise test
would be performed on day 0 and before induction. We will analyze the patient's demographic
data and the cardiac parameters to see if continuous cardiac output monitor can predict the
occurrence of PIH.
Post-induction hypotension (PIH) is very common with high incidence about 9-60% in every kind
of surgeries includes general anesthesia and neuraxial anesthesia. There are multiple factors
that may cause PIH, like pre-operative fasting, bowel preparation, vasodilatation due to
anesthetics, sympathetic blockade and reduced stimulation during preparation before surgical
incision. Hypotension during the surgeries could possibly cause tissue hypoperfusion, tissue
ischemia and higher risk for acute kidney failure, stroke or myocardial infarction, which
result in higher risk for prolonged hospital stay or death [1-4]. In general surgical
patients, lower pre-induction systolic arterial pressure, older age (>50 years old), and
emergent surgery are independently associated with PIH[1].
However, nowadays heart rate variability (HRV), the inferior vena cava(IVC) ultrasound, and
stroke volume variation were demonstrated to be able to predict the PIH event [5-7]. However,
people with any kind of arrhythmia is not suitable for HRV analysis. Part of obese patients
are not suitable for IVC ultrasound due to poor image quality. Stroke volume variation can
only be monitored if the arterial catheter and Flotrac® were applied on the patient before
anesthetic induction.
In this study, the wireless continuous non-invasive sonography device has the benefits of
light-weighted, short learning curve, non-invasive, continuous monitoring, and more intuitive
collected data. It's a huge progress for non-invasive cardiac output during anesthesia with
GIS-Heartio®. The primary endpoint is if the change of cardiac output after fasting could
predict PIH. The second endpoint is whether the change of cardiac output during "passive leg
test" could predict PIH. If PIH can be predicted and prevented before anesthesia, the safety
of the surgery and prognosis of patient will be elevated!
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