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J Clin Monit Comput · Dec 2022
Blood pressure nomograms for children undergoing general anesthesia, stratified by age and anesthetic type, using data from a retrospective cohort at a tertiary pediatric center.
- Rosa J Hillgruber, Pavel Lutskov, Nicholas C West, Simon Whyte, and Matthias Görges.
- Research Institute, BC Children's Hospital, V3-324, 950 West 28th Ave, Vancouver, BC, V5Z 4H4, Canada.
- J Clin Monit Comput. 2022 Dec 1; 36 (6): 166716771667-1677.
AbstractReference values for non-invasive blood pressure (NIBP) are available for children undergoing general anesthesia, but have not been analyzed by type of anesthetic. This study establishes age-specific pediatric NIBP reference values, stratified by anesthetic type: inhalational anesthesia (IHA), total intravenous anesthesia (TIVA), and mostly intravenous anesthesia (MIVA, an inhalational induction followed by intravenous maintenance of anesthesia). NIBP measurements were extracted from a de-identified vital signs database for children < 19 years undergoing anesthesia between Jan/2013-Dec/2016, excluding cardiac surgery. We automatically rejected artifacts and randomly sampled 20 NIBP values per case. Anesthetic phase (induction/maintenance) was identified using operating room booking times for procedure start, and anesthetic types were identified based on intraoperative minimum alveolar concentration values in the different phases of the anesthetic. From 36,347 cases in our operating room booking system, we matched 24,457 cases with available vital signs. Of these, 20,613 (84%) had valid NIBP data and could be assigned to one anesthetic type: TIVA 11,819 [57%], IHA 4,752 [23%], and MIVA 4,042 [20%]. Mean NIBP during anesthesia increased with age, from median values of 48 mmHg (TIVA), 45 mmHg (IHA), and 41 mmHg (MIVA) in neonates, to 70 mmHg (TIVA), 68 mmHg (IHA), and 64 mmHg (MIVA) in 18-year-olds, respectively. In children < 1 year, mean NIBP values were 4 mmHg higher with TIVA than IHA (p < 0.001). These pediatric NIBP reference values contribute to ongoing debate about alarm limits based on age and anesthetic type, and may motivate prospective studies into the effects of different anesthesia regimes on vital signs.© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.
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