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Anaesth Intensive Care · Aug 1989
Comparative StudyA comparison of brachial, femoral, and aortic intra-arterial pressures before and after cardiopulmonary bypass.
- G P Gravlee, S D Brauer, M F O'Rourke, and A P Avolio.
- Department of Anesthesia, Bowman Gray School of Medicine, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27103.
- Anaesth Intensive Care. 1989 Aug 1;17(3):305-11.
AbstractFollowing recent evidence that brachial and femoral artery pressures are more reliable than radial artery pressures after cardiopulmonary bypass, thirty-one adults had simultaneous pre- and post-bypass measurements of brachial, femoral, and ascending aortic pressures. Two minutes after cardiopulmonary bypass, brachial artery systolic pressure and mean arterial pressure fell significantly below corresponding pressures in the femoral artery and aorta. Five minutes after cardiopulmonary bypass, only brachial artery systolic pressure was still less than femoral and aortic systolic pressures. By ten minutes after bypass, all significant pressure differences had resolved except between brachial and femoral artery systolic pressures. Clinically significant (greater than or equal to 5 mmHg) aortic-to-brachial reductions in mean arterial pressures occurred in six (19%) patients at two minutes and in three (10%) patients at five and ten minutes after bypass. Equivalent aortic-to-femoral mean pressure diminution occurred in two (6%) patients at two minutes and one (3%) patient at five and ten minutes after bypass. Neither systemic vascular resistance nor body temperatures contributed significantly to post-bypass central-to-peripheral pressure reductions. Immediately following bypass, femoral artery pressures reproduce central aortic pressures more reliably than do radial or brachial artery pressures.
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